• Maikop (Russia)

    Maykop, city and capital of the republic of Adygea, Krasnodar kray (territory), Russia, on the right bank of the Belaya River. Maykop (from the Adyghian myequape meaning “valley of apple trees”) was founded in 1857 as a Russian fortress. Food processing is the city’s leading industry; metalworking,

  • Maikop belt buckle (enamelwork)

    enamelwork: Ancient Western: …these Kuban enamels, the famous Maikop belt buckle (the Hermitage, Leningrad) depicting a griffin attacking a horse, is now regarded by Russian experts as a forgery. Consequently, the earliest enamelling from south Russia may date from the 3rd or 2nd century bce.

  • mail (communications)

    mail, the postal matter consigned under public authority from one person or post office to another. See postal

  • mail (armor)

    chain mail, form of body armour worn by European knights and other military men throughout most of the medieval period. An early form of mail, made by sewing iron rings to fabric or leather, was worn in late Roman times and may have originated in Asia, where such mail continued to be worn for many

  • mail collection

    postal system: United States: Free collection services came with the provision of street letter boxes in 1858. A free delivery service was established in 1863, covering 49 cities and employing 440 letter carriers. By 1900 the service was provided at 796 offices by 15,322 carriers. The rural free delivery (RFD)…

  • mail delivery

    postal system: Postal operations and management: …identity and are grouped for delivery to the individual address. In most countries, delivery is on a house-to-house basis, although boxes at a local post office are sometimes used.

  • mail handling

    postal system: Automation of mail handling: Since the 1950s there has been a marked intensification of research and development efforts to apply technology to the handling of mails, especially in countries faced by manpower problems and higher labour costs. The wide variety of projects undertaken in many countries and…

  • mail service

    postal system, the institution—almost invariably under the control of a government or quasi-government agency—that makes it possible for any person to send a letter, packet, or parcel to any addressee, in the same country or abroad, in the expectation that it will be conveyed according to certain

  • mail sorting

    postal system: Postal operations and management: The collection and sorting of individual items by the most economic method, concentrating together all items that are going to the same place or in the same direction, involves the use of local transport, usually operated by the postal services themselves, and sorting offices. The size of the…

  • mail-cheeked fish (fish)

    scorpaeniform, (order Scorpaeniformes), any one of a group of bony fishes that are characterized by a plate of bone running across each cheek. The scorpaeniforms are widespread throughout the oceans of the world. They are believed to have originated in warm marine waters but have invaded temperate

  • mail-in voting (politics)

    absentee voting, electoral process that enables persons who cannot appear at their designated polling places to vote from another location. The usual method of absentee voting is by mail, although provision is sometimes made for voting at prescribed places in advance of the polling date. Absentee

  • mail-order business (business)

    mail-order business, method of merchandising in which the seller’s offer is made through mass mailing of a circular or catalog or through an advertisement placed in a newspaper or magazine and in which the buyer places an order by mail. Delivery of the goods may be made by freight, express, or

  • Mail.ru (Russian company)

    Yuri Milner: ru, which, as Mail.ru, became one of Russia’s most successful Internet companies. Milner was its chief executive officer (2001–03). In 2005 Milner cofounded the holding company Digital Sky Technologies, which acquired control of Mail.ru and between 2005 and 2011 invested some $1 billion in more than two dozen…

  • Mailáth, János, Gróf (Hungarian author)

    János, Count Mailáth was a Hungarian writer and historian, who interpreted Magyar culture to the Germans and who wrote a sympathetic account of the Habsburg monarchy. Mailáth, the son of Count Jozsef Mailáth, an imperial minister of state, entered government service but soon had to resign because

  • mailbox

    postal system: United States: …with the provision of street letter boxes in 1858. A free delivery service was established in 1863, covering 49 cities and employing 440 letter carriers. By 1900 the service was provided at 796 offices by 15,322 carriers. The rural free delivery (RFD) service was introduced in 1896 and town delivery…

  • Mailer, Norman (American author)

    Norman Mailer was an American novelist and journalist best known for using a form of journalism—called New Journalism—that combines the imaginative subjectivity of literature with the more objective qualities of journalism. Both Mailer’s fiction and his nonfiction made a radical critique of the

  • Mailer, Norman Kingsley (American author)

    Norman Mailer was an American novelist and journalist best known for using a form of journalism—called New Journalism—that combines the imaginative subjectivity of literature with the more objective qualities of journalism. Both Mailer’s fiction and his nonfiction made a radical critique of the

  • Mailhot, Terese Marie (Canadian writer)

    13 Great Indigenous Writers to Read and Celebrate: Terese Marie Mailhot: Mailhot is a member of the Seabird Island Band from British Columbia, Canada. Her influences while growing up included the poetry of Emily Dickinson. In her early 20s Mailhot was admitted to a mental hospital and diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder and bipolar disorder. She…

  • Maillard reaction (chemistry)

    acrylamide: Manufacture and applications of acrylamide: …forms of heating initiate the Maillard reaction, in which reducing sugars (simple monosaccharides capable of carrying out reduction reactions) present in carbohydrate-rich foods react with amino acids to produce acrylamide. Asparagine appears to be the primary amino acid involved in the generation of acrylamide via the Maillard reaction.

  • Maillart, Robert (Swiss engineer)

    Robert Maillart was a Swiss bridge engineer whose radical use of reinforced concrete revolutionized masonry arch bridge design. After studying at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology of Zürich, where he received a degree in structural engineering in 1894, Maillart worked for several private

  • Maillebois, Nicolas Desmarets, Marquis de (French minister)

    Nicolas Desmarets, marquis de Maillebois was the minister of finance during the last seven years of the reign (1643–1715) of Louis XIV of France. A nephew of Louis’s great finance minister Jean-Baptiste Colbert, Desmarets rose rapidly in financial administration, but on Colbert’s death (1683) he

  • Maillet, Antonine (Canadian writer)

    New Brunswick: The arts: Antonine Maillet, an Acadian novelist and playwright from Bouctouche, achieved international recognition for her writing in French, which strikingly reveals the 17th-century idiom and structure of the language as spoken by today’s Acadians.

  • Maillol, Aristide (French sculptor)

    Aristide Maillol was a French sculptor, painter, and printmaker whose monumental statues of female nudes display a concern for mass and rigorous formal analysis. Maillol began his artistic career as a painter and tapestry designer; his early work reflected his great admiration for the Nabis, a

  • Maillotin uprising (French history)

    Paris: Medieval development and discord (12th century to 16th century): …a revolt called the “Maillotin uprising.” The rioters, armed with mauls (maillets), were ruthlessly put down, and the municipal function was suspended for the next 79 years. It was not until 1533, when Francis I ordered the teetering House of Pillars replaced by a new building, that a monarch…

  • Mailly-Nesle, Marie-Anne de, Duchess de Châteauroux (French noble)

    Marie-Anne de Mailly-Nesle, duchess de Châteauroux was a mistress of Louis XV of France who used her influence with the king to promote French involvement in the War of the Austrian Succession (1740–48). The fifth daughter of Louis de Mailly, Marquis de Nesle, Marie-Anne was married in 1734 to the

  • Mailly-Nesle, Pauline de, marquise de Vintimille (French noble)

    Louis XV: Already Pauline de Mailly-Nesle, marquise de Vintimille, Louis’s mistress from 1739 to 1741, had sponsored the war party that brought France into the inconclusive War of the Austrian Succession (1740–48) against Austria and Great Britain. In September 1745 the king took as his official mistress (maîtresse…

  • Mailman (American basketball player)

    Karl Malone is a former basketball player who owns the National Basketball Association (NBA) career record for free throws attempted (13,188) and made (9,787). He also ranks third in career points scored (36,928), field goals made (13,528), and minutes played (54,852). In 1996 Malone, known as “the

  • Maiman, Theodore H. (American physicist)

    Theodore H. Maiman was an American physicist, who constructed the first laser, a device that produces monochromatic coherent light, or light in which the rays are all of the same wavelength and phase. The laser has found numerous practical uses, ranging from delicate surgery to measuring the

  • Maiman, Theodore Harold (American physicist)

    Theodore H. Maiman was an American physicist, who constructed the first laser, a device that produces monochromatic coherent light, or light in which the rays are all of the same wavelength and phase. The laser has found numerous practical uses, ranging from delicate surgery to measuring the

  • Maimāna (Afghanistan)

    Meymaneh, town, northwestern Afghanistan. It lies at the northern foot of the Torkestān Mountain Range at an elevation of 2,850 feet (870 m). The town serves an agricultural area irrigated from the Qeyṣār River and also handles the trade in Karakul sheep with nomads. Meymaneh is linked with

  • Maimane, Mmusi (South African businessman and politician)

    Mmusi Maimane is a South African businessman and politician who has been active in opposition parties in the country. Since 2022, he has been the head of the Build One South Africa (BOSA) party, which he helped establish. Since 2024, he has served in the National Assembly as one of BOSA’s MPs. He

  • Maimane, Mmusi Aloysias (South African businessman and politician)

    Mmusi Maimane is a South African businessman and politician who has been active in opposition parties in the country. Since 2022, he has been the head of the Build One South Africa (BOSA) party, which he helped establish. Since 2024, he has served in the National Assembly as one of BOSA’s MPs. He

  • Maimbourg, Louis (French historian)

    Louis Maimbourg was a French Jesuit and historian who wrote critical works on Calvinism and Lutheranism and a defense of Gallican liberties—the belief that the Roman Catholic church in France should maintain some independence from papal control. Maimbourg was born to a noble family. He entered the

  • Maimon, Salomon (Jewish philosopher)

    Salomon Maimon was a Jewish philosopher whose acute Skepticism caused him to be acknowledged by the major German philosopher Immanuel Kant as his most perceptive critic. He combined an early and extensive familiarity with rabbinic learning with a proficiency in Hebrew, and, after acquiring a

  • Maimonides Hospital (hospital, San Francisco, California, United States)

    Erich Mendelsohn: …his important works include the Maimonides Hospital (1946). To his credit also are synagogues and community centres in St. Louis, Mo.; Cleveland, Ohio; Grand Rapids, Mich.; and St. Paul, Minn.

  • Maimonides, Moses (Jewish philosopher, scholar, and physician)

    Moses Maimonides was a Jewish philosopher, jurist, and physician, the foremost intellectual figure of medieval Judaism. His first major work, begun at age 23 and completed 10 years later, was a commentary on the Mishna, the collected Jewish oral laws. A monumental code of Jewish law followed in

  • Maïmouna: petite fille noire (novel by Sadji)

    African literature: French: Abdoulaye Sadji of Senegal wrote Maïmouna (1958; Eng. trans. Maïmouna), about an African girl who leaves home and goes to Dakar, where she is seduced. She returns to her home and bears a child who dies; she becomes ill but then recovers her traditional roots.

  • Main Basse sur le Cameroun (work by Beti)

    Mongo Beti: Main basse sur le Cameroun (1972; “Rape of Cameroon”), a book explaining the emplacement of a neocolonial regime in his homeland, was immediately banned in France and in Cameroon. Two years later he published the novels Perpétue et l’habitude du malheur (1974; Perpetua and the…

  • Main Botanical Garden of the Academy of Sciences (garden, Moscow, Russia)

    Main Botanical Garden of the Academy of Sciences, one of the world’s largest botanical gardens. Founded in 1945, it occupies a 360-hectare (889-acre) site in Moscow, Russia. About 21,000 varieties of plants are cultivated, many of which are native to Russia. One of its unique features is a large

  • Main Building (building, Washington, D.C., United States)

    Library of Congress: The Thomas Jefferson Building (originally called the Congressional Library, or Main Building) houses the Main Reading Room. Designed in Italian Renaissance style, it was completed in 1897 and magnificently restored 100 years later. The John Adams Building, completed in 1939, received its current name in 1980…

  • Main Camp (New South Wales, Australia)

    West Wyalong, town, south-central New South Wales, Australia. It is situated in the fertile Riverina district. Founded as a gold-mining settlement in 1895, it was originally known as Main Camp to distinguish it from Wyalong (3 miles [5 km] away). Proclaimed a town in 1900, it became a shire in

  • Main Central Thrust (fault, Himalayas)

    metamorphic rock: Structural features: …Himalayan mountain belt is the Main Central Thrust, a thrust fault that runs for hundreds of kilometres from east to west and was responsible for the transportation of rocks belonging to the Eurasian Plate southward over those of the Indian Plate. Along much of the length of this fault, the…

  • Main Course (album by the Bee Gees)

    the Bee Gees: At the forefront of disco: …returned to the charts with Main Course (1975). Recorded in Miami, grounded in rhythm and blues, and typified by the chart-topping single “Jive Talkin’,” the album put the Bee Gees at the forefront of the disco movement. Barry also debuted a falsetto singing voice that soon became a trademark of…

  • Main Currents in 19th Century Literature (work by Brandes)

    Georg Brandes: (1872–90; Main Currents in 19th Century Literature). In these lectures, which catalyzed the breakthrough to realism in Danish literature, Brandes called for writers to reject the fantasy and abstract idealism of late Romanticism and instead work in the service of progressive ideas and the reform of…

  • Main Directorate (Soviet military intelligence organization)

    GRU, Russia’s military intelligence agency. The GRU traces its roots to an organization that was set up after the 1917 Russian Revolution and evolved during World War II into the GRU. The GRU outlasted the Soviet Union and has played a key role in multiple Russian operations on foreign soil in the

  • main entry (mining)

    coal mining: Ground control and roof support: Main entries are driven so as to divide the property into major areas; they usually serve the life of the mine for ventilation and for worker and material transport. Submain entries can be regarded as feeders from the mains that subdivide each major area. From…

  • main gasing (Malaysian game)

    Malaysia: Sports and recreation: Top-spinning (main gasing) competitions are seriously contested, with winning tops often spinning for well over an hour. In some areas, top spinning is not merely a random pastime but is associated with the agricultural cycle. Kite flying also is a favourite activity, as are bird-singing contests,…

  • main geomagnetic field

    Earth: The geomagnetic field and magnetosphere: Earth’s main magnetic field permeates the planet and an enormous volume of space surrounding it. A great teardrop-shaped region of space called the magnetosphere is formed by the interaction of Earth’s field with the solar wind. At a distance of about 65,000 km (40,000 miles) outward…

  • main haulage (mining)

    coal mining: Haulage: …coal onto the primary or main haulage; and the main haulage system, which removes the coal from the mine. The fundamental difference between face, intermediate, and main haulages is that the last two are essentially auxiliary operations in support of the first. Face haulage systems must be designed to handle…

  • Main Ingredient (American band)

    Cuba Gooding, Jr.: …of the R&B group the Main Ingredient, which had a major hit in 1972 with the song “Everybody Plays the Fool.” The family moved to Los Angeles about that time, but Gooding’s father left the family two years later. Gooding began break dancing in the early 1980s, and he was…

  • Main Injector (synchrotron)

    particle accelerator: Proton synchrotrons: In 1999 the Main Injector, a new synchrotron with a 3.3-km (2.1-mile) magnet ring, replaced the earlier machine to provide a more-intense beam for the Tevatron.

  • Main Intelligence Directorate (Soviet military intelligence organization)

    GRU, Russia’s military intelligence agency. The GRU traces its roots to an organization that was set up after the 1917 Russian Revolution and evolved during World War II into the GRU. The GRU outlasted the Soviet Union and has played a key role in multiple Russian operations on foreign soil in the

  • Main Island (island, Bermuda)

    Bermuda: The main islands are clustered together in the shape of a fishhook and are connected by bridges. The largest island is Main Island, 14 miles (22.5 km) long and 1 mile wide. The Peak, at 259 feet (79 metres) on Main Island, is the highest point.…

  • main memory (computer technology)

    cache memory: …an extension of, a computer’s main memory. Both main memory and cache are internal random-access memories (RAMs) that use semiconductor-based transistor circuits. Cache holds a copy of only the most frequently used information or program codes stored in the main memory. The smaller capacity of the cache reduces the time…

  • main motion (parliamentary procedure)

    parliamentary procedure: Rules of parliamentary procedure: Motions may be classified as main motions, which introduce a proposition, or as secondary motions, which are designed to affect the main motion or its consideration. A main motion is in order only when there is no other business before an assembly. It yields in precedence to all other questions.

  • Main Offender (album by Richards)

    Keith Richards: The Rolling Stones: …albums Talk Is Cheap (1988), Main Offender (1992), and Crosseyed Heart (2015). Such influences can also be found in his collaborations with other musicians, such as those with Eric Clapton, Ron Wood (who joined the Rolling Stones in 1975), Tom Waits, George Jones, and Richards’s backing band the X-Pensive Winos.

  • Main Office for the Control of Presentations and Public Performances (Polish government agency)

    Poland: Media and publishing: Under the communist government, the Main Office for the Control of the Press, Publications, and Public Performances (GUKPIW), headquartered in Warsaw, controlled the media, publishing, films, theatres, exhibitions, advertising, and related activities. The bureau maintained an office in all television and radio stations, press and publishing houses, film and theatre…

  • Main Range (mountains, Malaysia)

    Main Range, mountain range in West Malaysia, the most prominent mountain group on the Malay Peninsula. Composed of granite with some patches of altered stratified rocks, the range extends southward for 300 miles (480 km) from the Thai border, with elevations rarely less than 3,000 feet (900 m) and

  • Main Ridge (ridge, Trinidad and Tobago)

    Trinidad and Tobago: Relief and drainage: Its dominant feature is the Main Ridge, which runs from northeast to southwest, rising to heights of about 1,800 feet (550 metres). The ridge slopes more gently to the southwest onto a coral plain. The coral formation has given rise to a number of reefs, one of which, Buccoo Coral…

  • Main River (river, Germany)

    Main River, river, an important right- (east-) bank tributary of the Rhine in Germany. It is formed, near Kulmbach, by the confluence of the Weisser (White) Main, which rises in the Fichtel Mountains, and the Roter (Red) Main, which rises on the eastern slope of the Fränkische Mountains (Franconian

  • main sequence (astronomy)

    star cluster: Globular clusters: …of stars along the lower main sequence, with a giant branch containing more-luminous stars curving from there upward to the red and with a horizontal branch starting about halfway up the giant branch and extending toward the blue.

  • main sequence star (astronomy)

    astronomy: Measuring observable stellar properties: …of hydrostatic equilibrium are termed main-sequence stars, and they occupy a well-defined band on the Hertzsprung-Russell (H-R) diagram, in which luminosity is plotted against colour index or temperature. Spectral classification, based initially on the colour index, includes the major spectral types O, B, A, F, G, K and M, each…

  • Main Street (film by Doyle [2010])

    Colin Firth: From the The King’s Speech to the Kingsman series: …businessman in the small-town drama Main Street (2010), Firth took the role of a British intelligence agent suspected of treason in the 2011 film adaptation of John le Carré’s novel Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy. In the dark comedy Arthur Newman (2012), he starred as a discontented family man who fakes…

  • Main Street (novel by Lewis)

    Main Street, novel by Sinclair Lewis, published in 1920. The story of Main Street is filtered through the eyes of Carol Kennicott, a young woman married to a Midwestern doctor who settles in the Minnesota town of Gopher Prairie (modeled on Lewis’s hometown of Sauk Centre). The book’s power derives

  • Main, army of the (Prussian military organization)

    Seven Weeks’ War: …Prussian detachment, known as the army of the Main, meanwhile dealt with the forces of Bavaria and other German states that had sided with Austria. Simultaneously, a campaign was fought in Venetia between the Austrian army of the south and the Italians, who had made an alliance with Prussia.

  • Main, John (American anthropologist)

    Elsie Clews Parsons was an American sociologist and anthropologist whose studies of the Pueblo and other Native American peoples of the southwestern United States remain standard references. Elsie Clews attended private schools and graduated from Barnard College (1896). She then studied history and

  • main-belt asteroid (astronomy)

    asteroid: Distribution and Kirkwood gaps: …AU, a region called the main belt. The mean distances are not uniformly distributed but exhibit population depletions, or “gaps.” Those so-called Kirkwood gaps are due to mean-motion resonances with Jupiter’s orbital period. An asteroid with a mean distance from the Sun of 2.50 AU, for example, makes three circuits…

  • Main-Bird Series (geology)

    Witwatersrand System: …is divided into the lower Main-Bird Series, followed by the Kimberley-Elsburg Series. The Government Reef Series consists of alternating shales and quartzites in addition to pebbly layers that contain gold deposits; it also contains indications of a period of extensive glaciation. The most economically important series is the Main-Bird Series,…

  • Main-Danube Canal (canal, Germany)

    Main-Danube Canal, commercial waterway in the southern German state of Bavaria. Completed in 1992, the canal is 171 km (106 miles) long and runs from Bamberg on the Main River (a tributary of the Rhine River) to Kelheim on the Danube River, permitting traffic to flow between the North Sea and the

  • Main-Donau-Kanal (canal, Germany)

    Main-Danube Canal, commercial waterway in the southern German state of Bavaria. Completed in 1992, the canal is 171 km (106 miles) long and runs from Bamberg on the Main River (a tributary of the Rhine River) to Kelheim on the Danube River, permitting traffic to flow between the North Sea and the

  • main-group element (chemistry)

    chemical compound: The periodic table: …and 2 are called the representative metals; those in the centre of the periodic table are called the transition metals. The lanthanoids and actinoids shown below the periodic table are special classes of transition metals.

  • Main-Travelled Roads (novel by Garland)

    Hamlin Garland: …stories that were collected in Main-Travelled Roads (1891), one of his best works. The short stories he published in Prairie Folk (1892) and Wayside Courtships (1897) were later combined in Other Main-Travelled Roads (1910). In 1892 Garland published three lacklustre novels. His next novel, Rose of Dutcher’s Coolly (1895), tells…

  • Maina (peninsula, Greece)

    Máni, peninsula of the southern Peloponnese (Modern Greek: Pelopónnisos), in the nomós (department) of Laconia (Lakonía), Greece. The area has been set aside as a historical district by the government. The rugged, rather isolated peninsula, 28 miles (45 km) long, is an extension of the Taïyetos

  • Maina Polypyrgos (peninsula, Greece)

    Máni, peninsula of the southern Peloponnese (Modern Greek: Pelopónnisos), in the nomós (department) of Laconia (Lakonía), Greece. The area has been set aside as a historical district by the government. The rugged, rather isolated peninsula, 28 miles (45 km) long, is an extension of the Taïyetos

  • Mainard, François (French poet)

    François Maynard was a French poet, leading disciple of François de Malherbe and, like him, concerned with the clarification of the French language. He is commonly confused with François Ménard of Nîmes, also a poet. Maynard obtained a post with Marguerite de Valois in 1605 and began writing

  • Maïnassara, Ibrahim Baré (military ruler, Niger)

    Ibrahim Baré Maïnassara was a soldier, diplomat, and politician who orchestrated a coup in 1996 that overthrew Niger’s first democratically elected government. He subsequently served as president (1996–99) until his assassination. Maïnassara, who was of Hausa ancestry, enlisted in the army in 1970

  • mainboard (electronics)

    motherboard, printed circuit board (PCB) that connects all components of a general-purpose computer. A motherboard is often referred to as the “backbone” or “spine” of a computer. A motherboard is easily identified, as it is the largest board inside a computer’s casing. In tower computers, it

  • Maine (maritime incident, harbor of Havana, Cuba [1898])

    destruction of the Maine, (February 15, 1898), an incident preceding the Spanish-American War in which a mysterious explosion sank the U.S. battleship Maine in the harbour of Havana. The destruction of the Maine was one of a series of incidents that precipitated the United States’ intervention in

  • Maine (historical region, France)

    Maine, historic region encompassing the western French départements of Mayenne and Sarthe and coextensive with the former province of Maine. The two Gallo-Roman civitates of the Cenomani and of the Diablintes were merged in the middle of the 5th century into the single pagus, or district, of Le

  • Maine (state, United States)

    Maine, constituent state of the United States of America. The largest of the six New England states in area, it lies at the northeastern corner of the country. Its total area, including about 2,300 square miles (6,000 square km) of inland water, represents nearly half of the total area of New

  • Maine coon cat (breed of cat)

    Maine coon cat, North America’s only native breed of longhaired domestic cat. Though its origins are unknown, it was first shown in Boston in 1878. Maines are large, muscular, and heavy-boned; they may have been named for their raccoon-like tail. Excellent mousers, they are known for their

  • Maine de Biran, Marie-François-Pierre (French statesman and philosopher)

    Marie-François-Pierre Maine de Biran was a French statesman, empiricist philosopher, and prolific writer who stressed the inner life of man, against the prevalent emphasis on external sense experience, as a prerequisite for understanding the human self. Born with the surname Gonthier de Biran, he

  • Maine Doings (work by Coffin)

    Robert P. Tristram Coffin: …series on American rivers; and Maine Doings (1950), informal essays on New England life.

  • Maine Literary and Theological Institution (college, Waterville, Maine, United States)

    Colby College, private, coeducational institution of higher learning in Waterville, Maine, U.S. Colby is an undergraduate college with a curriculum based in the liberal arts and sciences. It offers study-abroad programs in France, Spain, Ireland, Mexico, England, and Russia. Campus facilities

  • Maine Pyar Kiya (film by Barjatya [1989])

    Salman Khan: 1988–89: Debut and breakout: …in the 1989 romantic film Maine Pyar Kiya (“I Have Loved”), in which his performance as a young man who triumphs in love despite family disapproval earned him a Filmfare Award for best male debut. His name in the film, Prem (“Love”), was to become something of a lucky charm…

  • Maine River (river, France)

    Maine River, river, Maine-et-Loire département, western France, 7 mi (12 km) long, formed by the confluence of the Mayenne, the Sarthe, and the Loire rivers. Within 6 mi (north) of Angers, the Loire, meandering from the east, joins the southward-flowing Sarthe River, which is linked about 2.5 mi

  • Maine State Seminary (college, Lewiston, Maine, United States)

    Bates College, private, coeducational institution of higher learning in Lewiston, Maine, U.S. It is a liberal arts college that offers bachelor’s degree programs in literature, languages, social sciences, life and physical sciences, philosophy, and other areas. Research facilities include the

  • Maine System, University of (university system, Maine, United States)

    University of Maine, state university system of Maine, U.S. It comprises seven coeducational institutions, including the University of Southern Maine. The University of Maine is a land-grant and sea-grant university based in Orono. It offers a wide range of undergraduate, graduate, and professional

  • Maine Woods, The (essays by Thoreau)

    The Maine Woods, collection of three autobiographical narratives by Henry David Thoreau. Each of the essays recounts the details of an excursion in Maine. The collection, edited by the clergyman and writer William Ellery Channing, Thoreau’s friend and frequent touring companion, was issued

  • Maine, destruction of the (maritime incident, harbor of Havana, Cuba [1898])

    destruction of the Maine, (February 15, 1898), an incident preceding the Spanish-American War in which a mysterious explosion sank the U.S. battleship Maine in the harbour of Havana. The destruction of the Maine was one of a series of incidents that precipitated the United States’ intervention in

  • Maine, flag of (United States state flag)

    U.S. state flag consisting of a dark blue field (background) with the state coat of arms in the center.Until 1820 Maine was a district of Massachusetts, and its early symbols were based on that connection. The pine tree emblem that had been adopted for the Massachusetts naval flag in April 1776 was

  • Maine, Louis-Auguste de Bourbon, duc du (French aristocrat)

    Louis-Auguste de Bourbon, duke du Maine was an illegitimate son of King Louis XIV of France who attempted without success to wrest control of the government from Philippe II, Duke d’Orléans, who was the regent (1715–23) for Louis XIV’s successor, Louis XV. The eldest surviving child of Louis XIV by

  • Maine, Sir Henry (British jurist, historian, and anthropologist)

    Sir Henry Maine was a British jurist and legal historian who pioneered the study of comparative law, notably primitive law and anthropological jurisprudence. While professor of civil law at the University of Cambridge (1847–54), Maine also began lecturing on Roman law at the Inns of Court, London.

  • Maine, Sir Henry James Sumner (British jurist, historian, and anthropologist)

    Sir Henry Maine was a British jurist and legal historian who pioneered the study of comparative law, notably primitive law and anthropological jurisprudence. While professor of civil law at the University of Cambridge (1847–54), Maine also began lecturing on Roman law at the Inns of Court, London.

  • Maine, University of (university system, Maine, United States)

    University of Maine, state university system of Maine, U.S. It comprises seven coeducational institutions, including the University of Southern Maine. The University of Maine is a land-grant and sea-grant university based in Orono. It offers a wide range of undergraduate, graduate, and professional

  • Maine-Anjou (breed of cattle)

    livestock farming: Beef cattle breeds: …fourth important breed is the Maine–Anjou, which is the largest of the French breeds.

  • Maine-et-Loire (department, France)

    Pays de la Loire: of Mayenne, Sarthe, Maine-et-Loire, Vendée, and Loire-Atlantique. Pays de la Loire is bounded by the régions of Bourgogne-Franche-Comté to the northwest, Normandy to the north, Centre to the east, and Nouvelle-Aquitaine to the south. The Bay of Biscay in the Atlantic Ocean lies to the

  • Maine-Montparnasse (district, Paris, France)

    Paris: Modern business quarters: The centrepiece of the Maine-Montparnasse district is a 59-story office tower on the site of the old Montparnasse railway station. A more compact station was built one street away on the avenue du Maine, where the rails are hidden on three sides by buildings 15 to 18 stories high.…

  • Maines, Natalie (American musician)

    country music: Country music politics: …radio stations, after lead singer Natalie Maines criticized U.S. Pres. George W. Bush during a concert. A feud also ensued between the group and singer Toby Keith, who had released the patriotic “Courtesy of the Red, White, and Blue (The Angry American)” in the wake of the September 11 attacks…

  • Maines, Natalie Louise (American musician)

    country music: Country music politics: …radio stations, after lead singer Natalie Maines criticized U.S. Pres. George W. Bush during a concert. A feud also ensued between the group and singer Toby Keith, who had released the patriotic “Courtesy of the Red, White, and Blue (The Angry American)” in the wake of the September 11 attacks…