• Malbone, Edward Greene (American painter)

    Edward Greene Malbone was a painter generally regarded as the greatest American miniaturist. Largely self-taught, Malbone began his professional career in Providence, Rhode Island, and by age 17 he had developed a remarkably skilled technique. A man of agreeable manners who was blessed with what

  • Malbork (Poland)

    Malbork, city, Pomorskie województwo (province), northern Poland. It lies on the Nogat River, the easternmost distributary of the Vistula River delta. The town was founded on the site of a medieval Prussian estate fortified by knights of the Teutonic Order in 1236 and was once the residence of

  • Malbork Castle (castle, Malbork, Poland)

    Malbork Castle, massive brick fortress enclosing three fortified castles that was built in the 13th century by Teutonic Knights in Malbork, Poland. Encompassing 52 acres (21 ha), Malbork Castle is Europe’s largest fortress by land area. It stands on the banks of the Nogat River, about 25 miles (40

  • Malbrouck monkey (primate)

    vervet: …Ethiopia and northeastern Africa, the Malbrouck monkey (C. cynosuros) of Angola and the southern Congo, the bale monkey (C. djamdjamensis) of the Bale Mountains of Ethiopia, the vervet (C. pygerythrus) of eastern and southern Africa, the green monkey (C. sabaeus) of West Africa, and the tantalus monkey (C.

  • Malchus (Jewish historian)

    Judaism: Egyptian Jewish literature: Cleodemus (Malchus), in an attempt to win for the Jews the regard of the Greeks, asserted in his history that two sons of Abraham had joined Heracles in his expedition in Africa and that the Greek hero had married the daughter of one of them.…

  • Malchus (Syrian philosopher)

    Porphyry was a Neoplatonist Greek philosopher, important both as an editor and as a biographer of the philosopher Plotinus and for his commentary on Aristotle’s Categories, which set the stage for medieval developments of logic and the problem of universals. Boethius’ Latin translation of the

  • malcoha (bird)

    malcoha, any of several species of cuckoos of southern Asia, especially members of the genus Rhopodytes (often placed in Phaenicophaeus). Malcohas are noted for having a long tail, a stout bill with bristly base, and bare skin around the eyes. They are forest birds that move in a squirrellike

  • Malcolm (fictional character)

    Malcolm, fictional character, a son of Duncan, king of Scotland, who is murdered by the nobleman Macbeth in William Shakespeare’s tragic play Macbeth, written sometime in 1606–07 and published in the First Folio of 1623. The character is based on Malcolm III Canmore, a son of Duncan I, who ruled

  • Malcolm (novel by Purdy)

    James Purdy: Malcolm (1959) tells the story of the experiences of a 15-year-old boy in a fruitless search for his identity. In Purdy’s later works, such as The Nephew (1960) and Cabot Wright Begins (1964), he further develops the bleak worldview that he first propounded in Malcolm.…

  • Malcolm & Marie (film by Levinson [2021])

    Zendaya: Big-screen debut and subsequent projects: …2021 include the romantic drama Malcolm & Marie, where she portrayed the titular character Marie, and the animated Space Jam: A New Legacy, in which she voiced the character of Lola Bunny. Zendaya starred as Chani alongside Timothée Chalamet in Denis Villeneuve’s multipart (2021 and 2024) adaptation of Dune

  • Malcolm I (king of Scotland)

    Malcolm I was the king of the Picts and Scots (Alba). Malcolm succeeded to the crown when his cousin Constantine II entered a monastery (943). He annexed Moray to the kingdom for the first time. After driving the Danes from York, the English king Edmund turned Cumbria over to Malcolm, apparently as

  • Malcolm II (king of Scotland)

    Malcolm II was the king of Scotland from 1005 to 1034, the first to reign over an extent of land roughly corresponding to much of modern Scotland. Malcolm succeeded to the throne after killing his predecessor, Kenneth III, and allegedly secured his territory by defeating a Northumbrian army at the

  • Malcolm III Canmore (king of Scotland)

    Malcolm III Canmore was the king of Scotland from 1058 to 1093, and the founder of the dynasty that consolidated royal power in the Scottish kingdom. The son of King Duncan I (reigned 1034–40), Malcolm lived in exile in England during part of the reign of his father’s murderer, Macbeth (reigned

  • Malcolm in the Middle (American television program)

    Bryan Cranston: First TV credits and Malcolm in the Middle: …Hal in the hit sitcom Malcolm in the Middle. His work earned him three Emmy nominations (but no wins) for outstanding supporting actor in a comedy series (2002, 2003, and 2006) over the course of the program’s seven seasons.

  • Malcolm IV (king of Scotland)

    Malcolm IV was the king of Scotland (1153–65). Malcolm ascended the throne at the age of 11. He was the eldest son of Henry, Earl of Huntingdon and of Northumberland (d. 1152), and succeeded his grandfather King David I. Under Malcolm’s predecessors, the kingdom of Scotland had been extended to

  • Malcolm the Maiden (king of Scotland)

    Malcolm IV was the king of Scotland (1153–65). Malcolm ascended the throne at the age of 11. He was the eldest son of Henry, Earl of Huntingdon and of Northumberland (d. 1152), and succeeded his grandfather King David I. Under Malcolm’s predecessors, the kingdom of Scotland had been extended to

  • Malcolm X (American Muslim leader)

    Malcolm X was an African American leader and prominent figure in the Nation of Islam who articulated concepts of race pride and Black nationalism in the early 1960s. After his assassination, the widespread distribution of his life story—The Autobiography of Malcolm X (1965)—made him an ideological

  • Malcolm X (film by Lee [1992])

    Spike Lee: Mid-career: Malcolm X, 25th Hour, and Inside Man: …of his monumental biographical film Malcolm X (1992), many of Lee’s later works received mixed reviews. Some observers complained about the excessive length of his films; others criticized his perpetuation of ethnic stereotypes, notably the Jewish characters in Mo’ Better Blues (1990) and the Italian Americans in Summer of Sam…

  • Malcolm, Catherine Wilson (New Zealand activist)

    Kate Sheppard was an English-born activist, who was a leader in the woman suffrage movement in New Zealand. She was instrumental in making New Zealand the first country in the world to grant women the right to vote (1893). Largely raised and educated in Scotland, she moved to New Zealand in the

  • Malcolm, Janet (American journalist)

    Janet Malcolm forged a piercingly analytical brand of American journalism in a career that spanned more than five decades and produced numerous nonfiction books, several of which originated as reported articles for The New Yorker, for which she was a contributor from 1963 until her death in 2021.

  • Malcolm, Norman (American philosopher)

    analytic philosophy: Wittgensteinians: …of Wittgenstein, the American philosopher Norman Malcolm, has investigated concepts such as knowledge, certainty, memory, and dreaming. As these topics suggest, Wittgensteinians tended to concentrate on Wittgenstein’s ideas about the nature of mental concepts and to work in the area of philosophical psychology. Typically, they began with classical philosophical theories…

  • Malcolmpeth (India)

    Mahabaleshwar, resort town, southwestern Maharashtra state, western India. It lies about 40 miles (64 km) southeast of Mumbai (Bombay) and is northwest of the town of Satara. At an elevation of 4,718 feet (1,438 metres) in the Sahyadri Hills of the Western Ghats, the town commands an excellent view

  • Malcontent, The (work by Marston)

    English literature: Other Jacobean dramatists: His tragicomedy The Malcontent (1604) is remarkable for its wild language and sexual and political disgust; Marston cuts the audience adrift from the moorings of reason by a dizzying interplay of parody and seriousness. Only in the city comedies of Thomas Middleton was Jonson’s moral concern with…

  • Malcontenta (house, Mira, Italy)

    Andrea Palladio: Visits to Rome and work in Vicenza: Normally (as at the Villa Foscari at Mira, called Malcontenta [1560]; the Villa Emo at Fanzolo [late 1550s]; and the Villa Badoer), the porch covers one major story and the attic, the entire structure being raised on a base that contains service areas and storage. In a third type…

  • malcontenti, I (work by Goldoni)

    Carlo Goldoni: …Chiari, whom he satirized in I malcontenti (performed 1755; “The Malcontent”), Goldoni was assailed by Carlo Gozzi, an adherent of the commedia dell’arte, who denounced Goldoni in a satirical poem (1757), then ridiculed both Goldoni and Chiari in a commedia dell’arte classic, L’amore delle tre melarance (performed 1761; “The Love…

  • Malczewski, Antoni (Polish poet)

    Antoni Malczewski was one of the first Polish Romantic poets. His single, superb poem gave him a lasting reputation in Polish literature. Belonging to a wealthy military and landholding family, Malczewski was educated at the lycée of Krzemieniec in Volhynia and then served in the Napoleonic Polish

  • Malda (India)

    Malda, town, north-central West Bengal state, northeastern India. It lies just east of the confluence of the Mahananda and Kalindri rivers and is part of the Ingraj Bazar urban agglomeration. The town rose to prominence as the river port of the Hindu capital of Pandua. During the 18th century it

  • Maldacena, Juan (Argentine American physicist)

    brane: …D-branes led Argentine American physicist Juan Maldacena to the 1997 discovery of anti de Sitter/conformal field theory (AdS/CFT) duality. This is a construction of a quantum theory of gravity, a previously unsolved problem, in terms of the well-understood Yang-Mills gauge fields of particle physics. AdS/CFT has led to unexpected connections…

  • Maldah (India)

    Malda, town, north-central West Bengal state, northeastern India. It lies just east of the confluence of the Mahananda and Kalindri rivers and is part of the Ingraj Bazar urban agglomeration. The town rose to prominence as the river port of the Hindu capital of Pandua. During the 18th century it

  • Maldane (polychaete genus)

    annelid: Annotated classification: Arenicola, Maldane, Axiothella. Order Flabelligerida Sedentary; setae of anterior segments directed forward to form a cephalic (head) cage; prostomium and peristome retractile, with 2 palpi and retractile branchiae; size, 1 to 10 cm; examples of genera: Flabelligera,

  • MALDEF (American organization)

    Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund (MALDEF), legal-aid resource and activist organization established in 1968 by Mexican American lawyers in San Antonio, Texas, with help from a grant by the Ford Foundation. Modeled on the Legal Defense Fund of the NAACP, the Mexican American Legal

  • Malden (Massachusetts, United States)

    Malden, city, Middlesex county, eastern Massachusetts, U.S. A northern suburb of Boston, it lies along the Malden River, a branch of the Mystic River. Settled in 1640, it became a part of Charlestown and was known as the Mystic Side. In 1649 it was incorporated as a town and named for Malden (now

  • Malden Island (atoll, Kiribati)

    Malden Island, coral atoll in the Central and Southern Line Islands, part of Kiribati, southwestern Pacific Ocean. It is situated 1,700 miles (2,700 km) south of Hawaii. A level formation with a land area of 11 square miles (28 square km) and a large lagoon, it has temple platforms and graves that

  • Malden, Arthur Capel, 1st earl of Essex, Viscount (English statesman)

    Arthur Capel, 1st earl of Essex was an English statesman, a member of the “Triumvirate” that dominated policy at the time of the Popish Plot (1678). The son of Arthur Capel, 1st Baron Capel, who was executed by the Parliamentarians in 1649, he was, after the Restoration of Charles II, created

  • Malden, Karl (American actor)

    Karl Malden was an American actor who won critical acclaim for his strong character roles, ranging from psychologically intense villains to the earnest Everyman, most notably alongside Marlon Brando in A Streetcar Named Desire (1951) and On the Waterfront (1954). Malden grew up in Gary, Indiana,

  • Maldeo, Rao (Indian ruler)

    Jodhpur: History: …its power under the ruler Rao Maldeo (1532–69), and gave allegiance to the Mughals after the invasion of the Mughal emperor Akbar in 1561. The Mughal emperor Aurangzeb invaded and plundered the Marwar region in 1679, ordering the conversion of its inhabitants to Islam.

  • Maldere, Pierre van (Flemish composer)

    symphony: Other composers of the mature Classical period: …Belgium), and the Flemish composer Pierre van Maldere came to grips successfully with the dominating German-Italian idiom; both were influenced by Stamitz and his school. Van Maldere was eulogized for his imaginative thematic structures as well as for the unusually serious nature of his compositions, which strongly contrasted with the…

  • Maldini, Paolo (Italian football player)

    AC Milan: …worn, in deference to defender Paolo Maldini, who played more than 900 matches for the club between 1985 and 2009. Other notable footballers who have played for Milan include Marco van Basten, George Weah, and Kaká. The club was owned by Italian businessman and politician Silvio Berlusconi from 1986 to…

  • maldison (insecticide)

    malathion, broad-spectrum organophosphate insecticide and acaricide (used to kill ticks and mites). Considerably less toxic to humans than parathion, malathion is suited for the control of household and garden insects and is important in the control of mosquitoes, boll weevils, fruit flies, and

  • Maldive Islands

    Maldives, independent island country in the north-central Indian Ocean. It consists of a chain of about 1,200 small coral islands and sandbanks (some 200 of which are inhabited), grouped in clusters, or atolls. The islands extend more than 510 miles (820 km) from north to south and 80 miles (130

  • Maldives

    Maldives, independent island country in the north-central Indian Ocean. It consists of a chain of about 1,200 small coral islands and sandbanks (some 200 of which are inhabited), grouped in clusters, or atolls. The islands extend more than 510 miles (820 km) from north to south and 80 miles (130

  • Maldives, flag of the

    national flag consisting of a white crescent on a green panel surrounded by a wide red border. The width-to-length ratio of the flag is 2 to 3.Arabs from the Arabian Peninsula and East African coast have sailed and traded widely throughout the Indian Ocean for centuries. Many of their ships carried

  • Maldives, history of the

    history of the Maldives, a survey of the important events and people in the history of the Maldives. Located in the north-central Indian Ocean, the Maldives is an independent island country that consists of a chain of about 1,200 small coral islands and sandbanks (some 200 of which are inhabited),

  • Maldives, Republic of

    Maldives, independent island country in the north-central Indian Ocean. It consists of a chain of about 1,200 small coral islands and sandbanks (some 200 of which are inhabited), grouped in clusters, or atolls. The islands extend more than 510 miles (820 km) from north to south and 80 miles (130

  • Maldivian Democratic Party (political party, Maldives)

    Mohamed Nasheed: Early life and political activism: …he helped found the opposition Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP) in November 2004.

  • Maldivian language

    Maldives: People: …is an Indo-European language called Dhivehi (or Maldivian); Arabic, Hindi, and English are also spoken. Islam is the state religion.

  • Maldon (England, United Kingdom)

    Maldon, town (parish) and district, administrative and historic county of Essex, southeastern England. The town site, on the south side of the Blackwater estuary, was occupied in prehistoric times, and a burgh was established there by the Saxons. A battle, commemorated in an Old English poem, was

  • Maldon (district, England, United Kingdom)

    Maldon: district, administrative and historic county of Essex, southeastern England. The town site, on the south side of the Blackwater estuary, was occupied in prehistoric times, and a burgh was established there by the Saxons. A battle, commemorated in an Old English poem, was fought between…

  • Maldon, Battle of (English history [991])

    Battle of Maldon, in English history, a conflict fought in 991 between Saxons and victorious Viking raiders. The battle was commemorated in an Old English heroic poem, which described the war parties aligned on either side of a stream in Essex. The poem recorded the names of English deserters as

  • Maldonado (Uruguay)

    Maldonado, town, southeastern Uruguay. It lies near the Atlantic coast, 67 miles (107 km) east of Montevideo, and just northwest of the resort city of Punta del Este. Founded in 1757, it was sacked by British forces in 1806, but many colonial buildings and ruins of Spanish fortifications remain.

  • Maldonado Miracle, The (film by Hayek [2003])

    Salma Hayek: …directorial debut, the television movie The Maldonado Miracle (2003). The inspirational drama, set in a struggling small town that becomes the site of an alleged miracle, earned Hayek an Emmy Award for outstanding direction. Hayek later became executive producer of the hit television series Ugly Betty (2006–10), a comedy starring…

  • Maldonado, Tomás (Argentine artist)

    Concrete Invention: Gyula Kosice, Rhod Rothfuss, Tomás Maldonado, and others collectively produced the first and only issue of the illustrated magazine Arturo, with texts and reproductions of work by many artists, including Joaquín Torres García, Lidy Prati, Wassily Kandinsky, and Piet Mondrian. The appearance of Arturo, which expressed its contributors’ opposition…

  • male (sex)

    muscle disease: The muscular dystrophies: …Duchenne type, which predominately affects boys, is severe. It causes difficulty in walking at about the age of four years, loss of the ability to walk at about the age of 11, and death before the age of 20, usually because of respiratory failure or pulmonary infections. There is a…

  • Malé (island, Maldives)

    Male, island and atoll, capital of Maldives, in the Indian Ocean. It lies on Male Atoll, about 400 miles (645 km) southwest of Sri Lanka. As the seat of government for the Maldivians, it has central courts, a government hospital, public and private schools with instruction in English, and a

  • Male (island, Maldives)

    Male, island and atoll, capital of Maldives, in the Indian Ocean. It lies on Male Atoll, about 400 miles (645 km) southwest of Sri Lanka. As the seat of government for the Maldivians, it has central courts, a government hospital, public and private schools with instruction in English, and a

  • Male and Female (painting by Pollock)

    Jackson Pollock: Early life and work: 1941), Male and Female (c. 1942), and Guardians of the Secret (1943).

  • Male Animal, The (play by Thurber and Nugent)

    Elliott Nugent: …his biggest stage success with The Male Animal, which he cowrote with his longtime friend James Thurber. It centres on a college professor who faces dismissal for his defense of free speech. Further complicating matters is the arrival of his wife’s former boyfriend. The play premiered in 1940, with Nugent…

  • Male Animal, The (film by Nugent [1942])

    Elliott Nugent: The following year he adapted The Male Animal for the screen, with Henry Fonda, Olivia de Havilland, and Jack Carson heading the cast. In 1944 Nugent directed Danny Kaye in his first feature film, the frenetic comedy Up in Arms. Nugent then reteamed with Hope on the box-office hit My…

  • male circumcision (ritual surgical procedure)

    circumcision, the operation of cutting away all or part of the foreskin (prepuce) of the penis. The origin of the practice is unknown, although the widespread distribution of circumcision as a ritual suggests great antiquity. Circumcision is generally viewed by anthropologists as a practice through

  • Malé Declaration on Sustainable Tourism (international agreement)

    environmental law: Sustainable development: Two years later, in the Malé Declaration on Sustainable Tourism, 27 Asian-Pacific countries pledged themselves to a set of principles that included fostering awareness of environmental ethics in tourism, reducing waste, promoting natural and cultural diversity, and supporting local economies and local community involvement. Highlighting the growing importance of sustainable…

  • male homosexuality (human behavior)

    Lavender Scare: …supposed security threat posed by gay and lesbian federal employees. The term was popularized by American historian David K. Johnson, who published the book The Lavender Scare: The Cold War Persecution of Gays and Lesbians in the Federal Government (2004), in which he documents those whose lives and careers were…

  • male infertility (medical disorder)

    infertility, the inability of a couple to conceive and reproduce. Infertility is defined as the failure to conceive after one year of regular intercourse without contraception or the inability of a woman to carry a pregnancy to a live birth. Infertility can affect either the male or the female and

  • male menopause (physiology)

    human endocrine system: The testis: …by late-onset hypogonadism (andropause, or male menopause), which begins around age 40 and results in decreased testicular function and testosterone deficiency. Symptoms of late-onset hypogonadism include decreased libido, fatigue, depression, and erectile dysfunction. The condition may proceed unnoticed for many years because symptoms are often subtle.

  • Male of the Species (play by Owen)

    Alun Owen: …quartet of plays, televised as Male of the Species (1969), with Laurence Olivier, Paul Scofield, Sean Connery, and Michael Caine, was immensely successful and was produced for the stage in 1974. But, although the play set out to depict the exploitation of women, the protagonist of the piece, Mary MacNeil,…

  • male oscuro, Il (work by Berto)

    Italian literature: Other writings: …world of psychological introspection (Il male oscuro [1964; “The Dark Sickness”] and La cosa buffa [1966; “The Funny Thing”; Eng. trans. Antonio in Love]). Natalia Ginzburg’s territory is the family, whether she reminisces about her own (Lessico famigliare [1963; Family Sayings]), handles fictional characters (Famiglia

  • male pattern baldness (dermatology)

    baldness: …first category is dominated by male pattern baldness (androgenetic alopecia). By age 50, some 30 to 50 of men have been affected by male pattern baldness, which progresses gradually, beginning with a characteristic recession of the hairline at the front or thinning of the crown hair and proceeding, in extreme…

  • Mâle Règle, La (poem by Hoccleve)

    Thomas Hoccleve: ” His poem La Mâle Règle (1406; “The Male Regimen”) presents a vivid picture of the delights of a bachelor’s evening amusements in the taverns and cookshops of Westminster. Hoccleve married in about 1411.

  • Male Saint-Martin (Belgian history)

    Liège: …1312, an event known as Male Saint-Martin. Political equality was granted to the laborers and to most of the trade guilds in 1313.

  • Male’ (island, Maldives)

    Male, island and atoll, capital of Maldives, in the Indian Ocean. It lies on Male Atoll, about 400 miles (645 km) southwest of Sri Lanka. As the seat of government for the Maldivians, it has central courts, a government hospital, public and private schools with instruction in English, and a

  • Mâle, Lodewijk van (count of Flanders)

    Louis II was the count of Flanders, Nevers, and Réthel (1346–84), who, by marrying his daughter Margaret to the Burgundian duke Philip the Bold (1369), prepared the way for the subsequent union of Flanders and Burgundy. The reign of Louis of Mâle was one long struggle with the Flemish communes,

  • Mâle, Louis de (count of Flanders)

    Louis II was the count of Flanders, Nevers, and Réthel (1346–84), who, by marrying his daughter Margaret to the Burgundian duke Philip the Bold (1369), prepared the way for the subsequent union of Flanders and Burgundy. The reign of Louis of Mâle was one long struggle with the Flemish communes,

  • Mâle, Un (work by Lemonnier)

    Camille Lemonnier: …wrote his first outstanding novel, Un Mâle (1881; “A Male”), under the influence of the naturalism of Émile Zola. Like his other novels, it is a work of great violence, describing characters of unbridled instincts and passions. Happe-Chair (1886), composed before but published after Zola’s Germinal, deals with the life…

  • Malebo Pool (lake, Africa)

    Malebo Pool, lakelike expansion of the lower Congo River above Livingstone Falls, between the Republic of the Congo (Brazzaville) to the west and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (Kinshasa) to the east. It covers an area of 174 square miles (450 square km) and is divided into deep navigable

  • Malebranche, Nicolas (French priest)

    Nicolas Malebranche was a French Roman Catholic priest, theologian, and major philosopher of Cartesianism, the school of philosophy arising from the work of René Descartes. His philosophy sought to synthesize Cartesianism with the thought of St. Augustine and with Neoplatonism. Malebranche, the

  • Malecite (people)

    Malecite, North American Indians of the Algonquian language family who occupied the Saint John valley in what is now New Brunswick, Can., and the northeastern corner of what is now the U.S. state of Maine. Their language was closely related to that of the Passamaquoddy, and they were members of the

  • Malecula (island, Vanuatu)

    Malakula, volcanic island, the second largest island (781 square miles [2,023 square km]) of Vanuatu, in the southwestern Pacific Ocean. It is 58 miles (94 km) long by 27 miles (44 km) wide and lies about 20 miles (32 km) south of Espiritu Santo, across the Bougainville (Malo) Strait. Its central

  • Maleficent (film by Stromberg [2014])

    Angelina Jolie: Film roles: …of the titular villain in Maleficent (2014). The live-action film attempted to cast the evil fairy from the 1959 Disney animated classic Sleeping Beauty in a more sympathetic light. Jolie later starred in the sequel (2019). In 2020 she starred in the fantasy-adventure Come Away, playing the mother of Peter…

  • Maleficent: Mistress of Evil (film by Rønning [2019])

    Angelina Jolie: Film roles: Jolie later starred in the sequel (2019). In 2020 she starred in the fantasy-adventure Come Away, playing the mother of Peter Pan and Alice (of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland), characters created by J.M. Barrie and Lewis Carroll, respectively.

  • maleficio de la mariposa, El (work by García Lorca)

    Federico García Lorca: Early poetry and plays: …maleficio de la mariposa (The Butterfly’s Evil Spell in Five Plays: Comedies and Tragi-Comedies, 1970), a symbolist work about a lovesick cockroach, in Madrid in 1920. Critics and audiences ridiculed the drama, and it closed after four performances. Lorca’s next full-length play, the historical verse drama Mariana Pineda (written…

  • Malegaon (India)

    Malegaon, city, northwestern Maharashtra state, western India. The city is part of the Nasik urban agglomeration and is located on the Girna River and on the highway between Mumbai (Bombay) and Agra (in Uttar Pradesh state). Malegaon was an early centre of the hand-loom industry. It rapidly

  • Mālegitti Śivālaya (temple, Bādāmi, India)

    South Asian arts: Medieval temple architecture: South Indian style of Karnataka: The Mālegitti Śivālaya temple at Bāẖāmi (early 8th century), consisting of a sanctum, a hall with a parapet of śālās and kūṭas (rectangular and square miniature shrines), and an open porch, is similar to examples in Tamil Nadu. The Virūpākṣa at Pattadkal (c. 733–746) is the…

  • maleic acid (chemical compound)

    maleic acid, unsaturated organic dibasic acid, used in making polyesters for fibre-reinforced laminated moldings and paint vehicles, and in the manufacture of fumaric acid and many other chemical products. Maleic acid and its anhydride are prepared industrially by the catalytic oxidation of

  • maleic anhydride (chemical compound)

    carboxylic acid: Polycarboxylic acids: Maleic anhydride, which is made industrially by oxidation of benzene (C6H6), is often used as a dienophile (isolated alkene component) in Diels-Alder reactions.

  • maleic hydrazide (chemical compound)

    heterocyclic compound: Five- and six-membered rings with two or more heteroatoms: The pyridazine derivative maleic hydrazide is a herbicide, and some pyrazines occur naturally—the antibiotic aspergillic acid, for example. The structures of the aforementioned compounds are:

  • Malek, Rami (American actor)

    Rami Malek is an American actor known for his immersive portrayals of a diverse range of characters, notably hacker Elliot Alderson in the critically acclaimed TV series Mr. Robot (2015–19) and legendary rock star Freddie Mercury in the biopic Bohemian Rhapsody (2018). For the latter performance,

  • Malek, Rami Said (American actor)

    Rami Malek is an American actor known for his immersive portrayals of a diverse range of characters, notably hacker Elliot Alderson in the critically acclaimed TV series Mr. Robot (2015–19) and legendary rock star Freddie Mercury in the biopic Bohemian Rhapsody (2018). For the latter performance,

  • Malel (historical kingdom, Africa)

    western Africa: Muslims in western Africa: Malel, to the south of Ghana, may similarly have been a prototype of the later Mande kingdom of Mali, which ultimately was to eclipse and absorb Ghana itself.

  • Malema, Julius (South African politician)

    Julius Malema is a South African politician known for his fiery outspoken nature and inspiring oratory. He entered the national political arena first as the president (2008–12) of the African National Congress Youth League and then as the leader of the Economic Freedom Fighters, the leftist

  • Malema, Julius Sello (South African politician)

    Julius Malema is a South African politician known for his fiery outspoken nature and inspiring oratory. He entered the national political arena first as the president (2008–12) of the African National Congress Youth League and then as the leader of the Economic Freedom Fighters, the leftist

  • Malemba (Africa)

    Kakongo: Kakongo’s principal port, Malemba, became a major centre for the export slave trade in the early 1700s—especially for English, Dutch, and French merchants—and port facilities were expanded from that time to handle increasing numbers of ships. Powerful local families who held titles such as “governor of the harbour”…

  • Malemort (novel by Glissant)

    Édouard Glissant: …narrative structure of his novel Malemort (1975) interweaves the colonial history of Martinique with an examination of contemporary experience, a technique he used again in La Case du commandeur (1981; “The Commander’s Cabin”). Glissant’s other verse collections include Boises (1977; “Woods”) and Pays rêvé, pays réel (1985; “Countries Dreamed, Countries…

  • Malenchenko, Yury (Russian cosmonaut)

    Peggy Whitson: …10, 2007—aboard Soyuz TMA-11 with Yury Malenchenko of Russia and Sheikh Muszaphar Shukor of Malaysia—as the commander of the Expedition 16 mission. The first female commander of the ISS, Whitson supervised and directed a significant expansion of the living and working space on the ISS, including the installation of components…

  • Malenkiye deti (work by Chukovsky)

    children’s literature: Russia/Soviet Union: , From Two to Five, 1963), however, that the opposition of two familiar forces, entertainment and instruction, can be sensed most clearly. The tension is typically expressed in Chukovsky’s account of the Soviet war over the fairy tale, the opposition to which reached its high point…

  • Malenkov, Georgy Maksimilianovich (prime minister of Soviet Union)

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