- Mandarin language
Mandarin language, the most widely spoken form of Chinese. Mandarin Chinese is spoken in all of China north of the Yangtze River and in much of the rest of the country and is the native language of two-thirds of the population. Mandarin Chinese is often divided into four subgroups: Northern
- mandarin lime (fruit)
lime: Types: The mandarin lime, also known as the Rangpur lime (C. ×limonia), is thought to be a lemon–mandarin orange hybrid and is commonly used to make marmalade. Finger limes (C. australasica), native to Australia, are a developing crop noted for their discrete juice vesicles, sometimes called “lime…
- mandarin orange (fruit)
Rutaceae: ×aurantifolia), tangerine and mandarin orange (C. reticulata), grapefruit (C. ×paradisi), and citron (C. medica). All of these are grown for their fruits. Other regionally important fruits are the kumquat (Fortunella species), bael fruit (Aegle marmelos), wood apple (Limonia acidissima
- Mandarin porcelain
Mandarin porcelain, ware produced in China for export in the late 18th century. It is called Mandarin because of the groups of figures in mandarin dress that appear in the decorative panels—painted mainly in gold, red, and rose pink and framed in underglaze blue—that characterize the ware. After
- mandarin squares (Chinese dress)
dress: China: …squares (called “mandarin squares,” or pufang) on the breast, as specific bird and animal emblems to designate each of the nine ranks of civil and military officials had been adopted by the Ming in 1391.
- Mandarin, the (comic-book character)
Iron Man: Origins: …crime cartel; and his archenemy, the Mandarin. The Mandarin was a sinister mastermind who rivaled Stark in scientific genius, and he wielded 10 rings of alien origin that granted him an array of powers.
- Mandarins, Les (novel by Beauvoir)
The Mandarins, novel by Simone de Beauvoir, published in French as Les Mandarins in 1954; it won the Prix Goncourt in 1954. De Beauvoir’s semiautobiographical novel addressed the attempts of post-World War II leftist intellectuals to abandon their elite, “mandarin” status and to engage in political
- Mandarins, The (novel by Beauvoir)
The Mandarins, novel by Simone de Beauvoir, published in French as Les Mandarins in 1954; it won the Prix Goncourt in 1954. De Beauvoir’s semiautobiographical novel addressed the attempts of post-World War II leftist intellectuals to abandon their elite, “mandarin” status and to engage in political
- Mandasawu, Mount (mountain, Indonesia)
East Nusa Tenggara: …7,814 feet (2,382 metres) at Mount Mandasawu on Flores and 7,962 feet (2,427 metres) at Mount Mutis on western Timor. The mountain peaks are lower on the islands in the northeastern part of the province. Coral atolls and reefs border much of the narrow coastal lowland. The islands have a…
- Mandasor (India)
Mandsaur, city, northwestern Madhya Pradesh state, west-central India. The city is situated on an upland plateau along the Sau River, a tributary of the Chambal River. Mandsaur is of considerable antiquity. Just to the southeast are monolithic stone pillars with inscriptions referring to the
- mandata (Roman law)
constitutiones principum: …other magistrates, might issue, (2) mandata, or instructions to subordinates, especially provincial governors, (3) rescripta, written answers to officials or others who consulted the emperor, in particular on a point of law, and (4) decreta, or decisions of the emperor sitting as a judge.
- mandate (legal order)
diplomatics: Classification of documents: …be classified as diplomas or mandates. Privileges and diplomas give evidence of legal transactions designed to be of long duration or even of permanent effect, while mandates and many papal letters contain commands.
- mandate (League of Nations)
mandate, an authorization granted by the League of Nations to a member nation to govern a former German or Turkish colony. The territory was called a mandated territory, or mandate. Following the defeat of Germany and Ottoman Turkey in World War I, their Asian and African possessions, which were
- mandate (agency)
agency: Modern developments: …agency as an aspect of mandate and the power to act as an agent to be derived solely from that concept.
- mandated newborn screening (medicine)
human genetic disease: Genetic testing: So-called mandated newborn screening was initiated in many societies in the latter quarter of the 20th century in an effort to prevent the drastic and often irreversible damage associated with a small number of relatively common genetic disorders whose sequelae can be either prevented or significantly…
- mandated territory (League of Nations)
mandate, an authorization granted by the League of Nations to a member nation to govern a former German or Turkish colony. The territory was called a mandated territory, or mandate. Following the defeat of Germany and Ottoman Turkey in World War I, their Asian and African possessions, which were
- Mandatory Fun (album by Yankovic)
“Weird Al” Yankovic: Career: …Poodle Hat (2003) and for Mandatory Fun (2014). Mandatory Fun debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 album chart, the first time a comedy album had topped the chart since 1963. His hit songs from this era include “Smells Like Nirvana” (1992), a parody of Nirvana’s “Smells Like Teen…
- Mandatory National Service (ProCon debate)
Mandatory national service (also called compulsory service) is a requirement, generally issued by the federal government, that people serve in the military or complete other works of service, most often as young people but age requirements vary. Modern propositions for compulsory service in the
- mandatory planning (economics)
China: The role of the government: …in China: those stipulated by mandatory planning, those done according to indicative planning (in which central planning of economic outcomes is indirectly implemented), and those governed by market forces. The second and third categories have grown at the expense of the first, but goods of national importance and almost all…
- mandatory sentence (law)
a legal penalty, usually consisting of imprisonment, that courts are required by law to impose upon individuals who are found guilty of certain crimes, regardless of the circumstances specific to the individual or the offense. Such a sentence may also represent a minimum or maximum prison term for
- mandatory spending (government policy)
fiscal policy: Three types of fiscal spending:
- Mandaue (Philippines)
Mandaue, city, east-central Cebu island, Philippines. It lies along the coast of the Camotes Sea just northeast of the city of Cebu, which it serves as an industrial suburb. Mandaue guards the northern entrance to Cebu harbour opposite Mactan Island. It was founded by Jesuits in the 17th century.
- Mandava (India)
Mandu, ruined city, southwestern Madhya Pradesh state, central India. It lies at an elevation of 2,079 feet (634 meters) above sea level in the Vindhya Range, 38 miles (60 km) southwest of Indore. Mandu is thought to have been founded in the 6th century ce by an individual named Munjadeva. It was
- Mande (people)
Mande, group of peoples of western Africa, whose various Mande languages form a branch of the Niger-Congo language family. The Mande are located primarily on the savanna plateau of the western Sudan, although small groups of Mande origin, whose members no longer exhibit Mande cultural traits, are
- Mande languages
Mande languages, a branch of the Niger-Congo language family comprising 40 languages spoken by some 20 million people in a more or less contiguous area of southeastern Senegal, The Gambia, southern Mauritania, southwestern Mali, eastern Guinea, northern and eastern Sierra Leone, northern Liberia,
- Mandel, Emily St. John (Canadian author)
Station Eleven: Emily St. John Mandel, published in 2014. Mandel’s fourth novel, Station Eleven tells the story of a devastating flu pandemic and the postapocalyptic world order forged by the pandemic’s survivors.
- Mandel, Georges (French politician)
Georges Mandel was a French political leader noted for his hostility toward Nazi Germany. A member of a prosperous Jewish family, though not related to the Rothschild banking dynasty, Mandel served on the personal staff of Premier Georges Clemenceau from 1906 to 1909 and again from 1917 to 1920. He
- Mandela Day (international memorial day)
Nelson Mandela: Presidency and retirement: Mandela Day, observed on Mandela’s birthday, was created to honor his legacy by promoting community service around the world. It was first observed on July 18, 2009, and was sponsored primarily by the Nelson Mandela Foundation and the 46664 initiative (the foundation’s HIV/AIDS global awareness…
- Mandela effect (psychological phenomenon)
Mandela effect, popularized phenomenon in which a group of people collectively misremember facts, events, or other details in a consistent manner. Paranormal researcher and author Fiona Broome conceptualized the effect after discovering that she and others possessed strong, yet false, memories
- Mandela’s Earth and Other Poems (poetry by Soyinka)
Wole Soyinka: Novels and poetry collections: …together as Early Poems (1998); Mandela’s Earth and Other Poems (1988); and Samarkand and Other Markets I Have Known (2002). His verse is characterized by a precise command of language and a mastery of lyric, dramatic, and meditative poetic forms. He wrote a good deal of Poems from Prison while…
- Mandela, Madiba (president of South Africa)
Nelson Mandela was a Black nationalist and the first Black president of South Africa (1994–99). His negotiations in the early 1990s with South African Pres. F.W. de Klerk helped end the country’s apartheid system of racial segregation and ushered in a peaceful transition to majority rule. Mandela
- Mandela, Nelson (president of South Africa)
Nelson Mandela was a Black nationalist and the first Black president of South Africa (1994–99). His negotiations in the early 1990s with South African Pres. F.W. de Klerk helped end the country’s apartheid system of racial segregation and ushered in a peaceful transition to majority rule. Mandela
- Mandela, Nelson Rolihlahla (president of South Africa)
Nelson Mandela was a Black nationalist and the first Black president of South Africa (1994–99). His negotiations in the early 1990s with South African Pres. F.W. de Klerk helped end the country’s apartheid system of racial segregation and ushered in a peaceful transition to majority rule. Mandela
- Mandela, Winnie (South African leader)
Winnie Madikizela-Mandela was a South African social worker and activist considered by many Black South Africans to be the “Mother of the Nation.” She was the second wife of Nelson Mandela, from whom she separated in 1992 after her questionable behaviour and unrestrained militancy alienated fellow
- Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom (film by Chadwick [2013])
Idris Elba: Stardom: The Wire, Luther, and Thor: …portrayal of Nelson Mandela in Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom (2013) and for his harrowing turn as the Commandant, a brutal warlord leading child soldiers in an unnamed African civil war, in Beasts of No Nation (2015); for the latter film he earned a BAFTA Award nomination.
- Mandelbrot set (mathematics)
Benoit Mandelbrot: The set, now called the Mandelbrot set, has the characteristic properties of a fractal: it is very far from being “smooth,” and small regions in the set look like smaller-scale copies of the whole set (a property called self-similarity). Mandelbrot’s innovative work with computer graphics stimulated a whole new use…
- Mandelbrot, Benoit (Polish-born French American mathematician)
Benoit Mandelbrot was a Polish-born French American mathematician universally known as the father of fractals. Fractals have been employed to describe diverse behaviour in economics, finance, the stock market, astronomy, and computer science. Mandelbrot was educated at the École Polytechnique
- mandelic acid (chemical compound)
carboxylic acid: Aromatic acids: Mandelic acid is toxic to bacteria in acidic solution and is used to treat urinary infections. Cinnamic acid, an unsaturated carboxylic acid, is the chief constituent of the fragrant balsamic resin storax. Ibuprofen and naproxen are important painkilling and anti-inflammatory drugs. Ibuprofen is
- mandelonitrile (chemical compound)
aldehyde: Addition of carbon nucleophiles: Benzaldehyde cyanohydrin (mandelonitrile) provides an interesting example of a chemical defense mechanism in the biological world. This substance is synthesized by millipedes (Apheloria corrugata) and stored in special glands. When a millipede is threatened, the cyanohydrin is secreted from its storage gland and undergoes enzyme-catalyzed dissociation to…
- Mandelshtam, Nadezhda Yakovlevna (Russian author)
Osip Emilyevich Mandelshtam: …through the efforts of his widow, who died in 1980, that little of Mandelshtam’s poetry was lost; she kept his works alive during the repression by memorizing them and by collecting copies.
- Mandelshtam, Osip Emilyevich (Russian poet)
Osip Emilyevich Mandelshtam was a major Russian poet, prose writer, and literary essayist. Most of his works went unpublished in the Soviet Union during the Joseph Stalin era (1929–53) and were almost unknown to generations of Russian readers until the mid-1960s. Mandelshtam grew up in St.
- Mandelson, Peter (British politician)
Peter Mandelson is a British politician, who was a leading adviser to British Prime Minister Tony Blair, a member of the British House of Commons (1992–2004), and business secretary (2008–10) under Prime Minister Gordon Brown. He briefly served as the British ambassador to the United States
- Mandelson, Peter Benjamin (British politician)
Peter Mandelson is a British politician, who was a leading adviser to British Prime Minister Tony Blair, a member of the British House of Commons (1992–2004), and business secretary (2008–10) under Prime Minister Gordon Brown. He briefly served as the British ambassador to the United States
- Mandelstam, Osip Emilyevich (Russian poet)
Osip Emilyevich Mandelshtam was a major Russian poet, prose writer, and literary essayist. Most of his works went unpublished in the Soviet Union during the Joseph Stalin era (1929–53) and were almost unknown to generations of Russian readers until the mid-1960s. Mandelshtam grew up in St.
- Mandelstam, Osip Emilyevich (Russian poet)
Osip Emilyevich Mandelshtam was a major Russian poet, prose writer, and literary essayist. Most of his works went unpublished in the Soviet Union during the Joseph Stalin era (1929–53) and were almost unknown to generations of Russian readers until the mid-1960s. Mandelshtam grew up in St.
- Mandelstamm, Leon (Russian translator)
biblical literature: Slavic versions: …Jewish rendering was undertaken by Leon Mandelstamm, who published the Pentateuch in 1862 (2nd ed., 1871) and the Psalter in 1864. Prohibited in Russia, it was first printed in Berlin. A complete Jewish Bible was published in Washington, D.C., in 1952.
- Mandelstamm, Leonid Isaakovich (Soviet physicist)
Igor Yevgenyevich Tamm: …1930 he succeeded his mentor, Leonid I. Mandelstam, to the chair of theoretical physics. In 1933 Tamm was elected a corresponding member of the Soviet Academy of Sciences. The following year, he joined the P.N. Lebedev Physics Institute of the Soviet Academy of Sciences (FIAN), where he organized and headed…
- Mander, Carel van (Dutch painter and writer)
Carel van Mander was a Dutch Mannerist painter, poet, and writer whose fame is principally based upon a biographical work on painters—Het Schilder-boeck (1604; “The Book of Painters”)—that has become for the northern countries what Giorgio Vasari’s Lives of the Painters became for Italy. Born of a
- Mander, Jane (New Zealand author)
Jane Mander was a writer noted for her realistic novels about her native land and her frank treatment of sexual issues. Mander grew up on the northern New Zealand frontier and had little formal schooling. At the age of 15 she taught primary school while completing her high-school education under a
- Mander, Karel van (Dutch painter and writer)
Carel van Mander was a Dutch Mannerist painter, poet, and writer whose fame is principally based upon a biographical work on painters—Het Schilder-boeck (1604; “The Book of Painters”)—that has become for the northern countries what Giorgio Vasari’s Lives of the Painters became for Italy. Born of a
- Mander, Mary Jane (New Zealand author)
Jane Mander was a writer noted for her realistic novels about her native land and her frank treatment of sexual issues. Mander grew up on the northern New Zealand frontier and had little formal schooling. At the age of 15 she taught primary school while completing her high-school education under a
- Mandeville (Jamaica)
Mandeville, town, west-central Jamaica, located approximately 60 miles (100 km) west of Kingston. It is a mountain resort situated at an elevation of 2,061 feet (628 metres). Surrounded by stone-walled pastures, the old centre of Mandeville has the atmosphere of an English village. Nearby is a
- Mandeville, Bernard de (British writer)
Bernard de Mandeville was a Dutch prose writer and philosopher who won European fame with The Fable of the Bees. Mandeville graduated in medicine from the University of Leiden in March 1691 and started to practice but very soon went abroad. Arriving in England to learn the language, he “found the
- Mandeville, Edward Montagu, Viscount (British general)
Edward Montagu, 2nd earl of Manchester was a Parliamentarian general in the English Civil Wars. Son of the 1st earl, Henry Montagu, he was educated at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge. He sat in Parliament from 1624 to 1626 and in the latter year was raised to the peerage as Baron Kimbolton, but he
- Mandeville, Geoffrey de (English baron)
Geoffrey de Mandeville, 1st earl of Essex , was the worst of a number of cruel and lawless barons during the reign of King Stephen of England. Geoffrey was a great landowner in Essex and elsewhere and hereditary constable of the Tower of London. He came to prominence in 1140 when Stephen, who could
- Mandeville, Sir John (English author)
Sir John Mandeville was the purported author of a collection of travelers’ tales from around the world, The Voyage and Travels of Sir John Mandeville, Knight, generally known as The Travels of Sir John Mandeville. The tales are selections from the narratives of genuine travelers, embellished with
- Mandhana, Smriti (Indian cricketer)
32 Notable Women Cricketers: Smriti Mandhana: Smriti Mandhana is a consistent opening batter for India and has scored more than 7,000 international runs with more than 15 centuries across formats. She holds the Indian women’s record for scoring the most hundreds in ODIs. She captained her state team, Maharashtra,…
- Mandhana, Smriti Shriniwas (Indian cricketer)
32 Notable Women Cricketers: Smriti Mandhana: Smriti Mandhana is a consistent opening batter for India and has scored more than 7,000 international runs with more than 15 centuries across formats. She holds the Indian women’s record for scoring the most hundreds in ODIs. She captained her state team, Maharashtra,…
- Mandhata (pilgrimage site, India)
Godarpura, pilgrimage centre, western Madhya Pradesh state, central India. It is focused mainly on the island of Mandhata in the Narmada River, about 40 miles (65 km) southeast of Indore. The town of Omkareshwar (or Omkarji) lies adjacent to the island on the south side of the river. Godarpura has
- Mandi (India)
Mandi, town, central Himachal Pradesh state, northwestern India. It lies along the Beas River north-northwest of Shimla, the state capital. Mandi is a trade centre for agricultural produce and timber. Hand-loom weaving and handicrafts are the principal industries. The town also conducts a frontier
- mandible (anatomy)
mandible, in anatomy, the movable lower jaw, consisting of a single bone or of completely fused bones in humans and other mammals. In birds, the mandible constitutes either the upper or the lower segment of the bill, and in invertebrates it is any of the various mouthparts that holds or bites food
- mandibular gland (zoology)
Hymenoptera: Internal structure: The function of the mandibular glands, which open near the inner angle of the mandible, is not fully understood. However, in gall wasps their secretion is known to cause an abnormal growth of cells in leaves. Among social forms, this gland in the queen produces both the substance that…
- mandibular nerve (anatomy)
human nervous system: Mandibular nerve: The mandibular nerve exits the cranial cavity via the foramen ovale and serves (1) the meninges and parts of the anterior cranial fossae (meningeal branches), (2) the temporomandibular joint, skin over part of the ear, and skin over the sides of the head…
- Mandibulata (arthropod subphylum)
jaw: In the subphylum Mandibulata (crustaceans, insects, and myriapods), the jaw limbs are the mandibles and, to some extent, the maxillae. Such limbs may be modified for other purposes, especially in insects. Horseshoe crabs (and perhaps the extinct trilobites) can chew food with toothed projections (gnathobases) at the bases…
- mandibulate moth
insect: Critical appraisal: …lepidopterans, members of the family Micropterigidae are more primitive than existing trichopterans (caddisflies). Although some entomologists treat them as a distinct order (Zeugloptera), others place them in the order Lepidoptera.
- mandibulofacial dysostosis (genetic disorder)
mandibulofacial dysostosis, a rare, genetic disorder, inherited as an autosomal-dominant trait and characterized by some or all of the following: underdevelopment of the cheek and jaw bones, widely separated eyes, malformation of the lower eyelid and lack of eyelashes, malformation of the ear
- mandilion (clothing)
dress: Colonial America: This was the mandilion, derived from the medieval tabard. It was now a loose jacket with free-hanging sleeves. It had been adopted by the Puritans, whose version was generally lined with cotton and fastened with hooks and eyes. By mid-century the buff coat had also become a staple…
- Manding (people)
Malinke, a West African people occupying parts of Guinea, Ivory Coast, Mali, Senegal, The Gambia, and Guinea-Bissau. They speak a Mandekan language of the Mande branch of the Niger-Congo family. The Malinke are divided into numerous independent groups dominated by a hereditary nobility, a feature
- Mandingo (people)
Mande, group of peoples of western Africa, whose various Mande languages form a branch of the Niger-Congo language family. The Mande are located primarily on the savanna plateau of the western Sudan, although small groups of Mande origin, whose members no longer exhibit Mande cultural traits, are
- Mandingo
Guinea: Ethnic groups and languages: …while in Upper Guinea the Malinke (Maninkakan) language is the most widespread. The Forest Region contains the linguistic areas, from east to west, of Kpelle (Guerzé), Loma (Toma), and Kisi.
- Mandingo (people)
Malinke, a West African people occupying parts of Guinea, Ivory Coast, Mali, Senegal, The Gambia, and Guinea-Bissau. They speak a Mandekan language of the Mande branch of the Niger-Congo family. The Malinke are divided into numerous independent groups dominated by a hereditary nobility, a feature
- Mandingo (film by Fleischer [1975])
Richard Fleischer: Later work: Mandingo (1975) was a popular melodrama set in the antebellum South. Fleischer had less success with the biopic The Incredible Sarah (1976), which starred Glenda Jackson as the fabled actress Sarah Bernhardt, and Ashanti (1979), with Peter Ustinov as a slave trader who abducts the…
- Mandingo empire (historical empire, Africa)
Mali, trading empire that flourished in western Africa from the 13th to the 16th century. The Mali empire developed from the state of Kangaba, on the upper Niger River east of the Fouta Djallon, and is said to have been founded before 1000 ce. The Malinke inhabitants of Kangaba acted as middlemen
- Mandingue Plateau (plateau, Mali)
Mali: Relief: …feet (600 metres) in the Mandingue Plateau near Bamako and more than 2,100 feet (640 metres) near Satadougou.
- Mandinka (people)
Malinke, a West African people occupying parts of Guinea, Ivory Coast, Mali, Senegal, The Gambia, and Guinea-Bissau. They speak a Mandekan language of the Mande branch of the Niger-Congo family. The Malinke are divided into numerous independent groups dominated by a hereditary nobility, a feature
- mandioc (plant)
cassava, (Manihot esculenta), tuberous edible plant of the spurge family (Euphorbiaceae) from the American tropics. It is cultivated throughout the tropical world for its tuberous roots, from which cassava flour, breads, tapioca, a laundry starch, and an alcoholic beverage are derived. Cassava
- Mandjou (song by Keita)
Salif Keita: Keita reciprocated by composing “Mandjou,” a praise song for Touré and the people of Mali. The song was accompanied melodically by guitars, organ, and saxophone—a combination that had by that time become Keita’s signature sound.
- Mandla (India)
Mandla, town, eastern Madhya Pradesh state, central India. It lies at an elevation of 1,768 feet (539 metres) above sea level, on an upland plateau at a U-shaped bend in the Narmada River where it is joined by the Banjar River. Mandla was formerly the capital of the Garh-Mandla Gond kingdom. More
- Mandogarh (India)
Mandu, ruined city, southwestern Madhya Pradesh state, central India. It lies at an elevation of 2,079 feet (634 meters) above sea level in the Vindhya Range, 38 miles (60 km) southwest of Indore. Mandu is thought to have been founded in the 6th century ce by an individual named Munjadeva. It was
- Mandokoro (Japanese government)
Japan: Muromachi government structure: The official business of the Mandokoro was to control the finances of the bakufu; and later the Ise family, who were hereditary retainers of the Ashikaga, came to inherit this office. The Samurai-dokoro, besides handling legal judgments, was entrusted with the control of the capital. Leading officials called shoshi who…
- mandola (musical instrument)
mandora, small, pear-shaped stringed instrument of the lute family. It was derived from earlier gittern or rebec models and acquired its name in the 16th century. Originally, the body and neck of the mandora were carved from a single piece of wood. It had a back-curving sickle-shaped pegbox with
- mandolin (musical instrument)
mandolin, small stringed musical instrument in the lute family. It evolved in the 18th century in Italy and Germany from the 16th-century mandora. The instrument’s modern form and proportions were strongly influenced by the maker Pasquale Vinaccia of Naples (1806–82). The mandolin has four pairs of
- mandoline (musical instrument)
mandolin, small stringed musical instrument in the lute family. It evolved in the 18th century in Italy and Germany from the 16th-century mandora. The instrument’s modern form and proportions were strongly influenced by the maker Pasquale Vinaccia of Naples (1806–82). The mandolin has four pairs of
- Mandor (ancient city, India)
Jodhpur: The contemporary city: The 4th-century ruins of Mandor, the ancient capital of Marwar, lie immediately to the north. In addition to the fort, Jodhpur’s other notable buildings include the Umaid Bhawan Palace, the home of the Jodhpur royal family and also a luxury hotel, and the white marble Jaswant Thada, a memorial…
- mandora (musical instrument)
mandora, small, pear-shaped stringed instrument of the lute family. It was derived from earlier gittern or rebec models and acquired its name in the 16th century. Originally, the body and neck of the mandora were carved from a single piece of wood. It had a back-curving sickle-shaped pegbox with
- mandorla (iconography)
mandorla, (Italian: “almond”), in religious art, almond-shaped aureole of light surrounding the entire figure of a holy person; it was used in Christian art usually for the figure of Christ and is also found in the art of Buddhism. Its origins are uncertain. The Western mandorla first appears in
- Mandragola, La (work by Machiavelli)
Niccolò Machiavelli: The Art of War and other writings of Niccolò Machiavelli: …Castracani of Lucca (1520) and The Mandrake (1518; La Mandragola). The former is a sketch of Castruccio Castracani (1281–1328), the Ghibelline ruler of Lucca (a city near Florence), who is presented as the greatest man of postclassical times. It concludes with a list of witty remarks attributed to Castruccio but…
- Mandragora (plant, genus Mandragora)
mandrake, (genus Mandragora), genus of six species of hallucinogenic plants in the nightshade family (Solanaceae) native to the Mediterranean region and the Himalayas. The plants are particularly noted for their potent roots, which somewhat resemble the human form and have a long history of use in
- Mandragora officinarum (plant)
mandrake: The best-known species, Mandragora officinarum, has long been known for its poisonous properties. In ancient times it was used as a narcotic and an aphrodisiac, and it was also believed to have certain magical powers. Its root was thought to be in the power of dark earth spirits.…
- mandrake (plant, genus Mandragora)
mandrake, (genus Mandragora), genus of six species of hallucinogenic plants in the nightshade family (Solanaceae) native to the Mediterranean region and the Himalayas. The plants are particularly noted for their potent roots, which somewhat resemble the human form and have a long history of use in
- Mandrake (short story by Fonseca)
Rubem Fonseca: …is the short story “Mandrake,” from his collection of stories titled O cobrador (1979; “The Collector”). Mandrake appeared again in the murder mystery A grande arte (1983; High Art), in which he gets involved in a perilous investigation of a prostitute’s murder. Fonseca also wrote the screenplay of the…
- mandrake (plant)
mayapple, (Podophyllum peltatum), perennial herbaceous plant of the family Berberidaceae (order Ranunculales) native to eastern North America, most commonly in shady areas on moist, rich soil. Its plant is 30 to 45 cm (12 to 18 inches) tall. Its dark green, umbrella-like leaves, nearly 30 cm
- Mandrake, The (work by Machiavelli)
Niccolò Machiavelli: The Art of War and other writings of Niccolò Machiavelli: …Castracani of Lucca (1520) and The Mandrake (1518; La Mandragola). The former is a sketch of Castruccio Castracani (1281–1328), the Ghibelline ruler of Lucca (a city near Florence), who is presented as the greatest man of postclassical times. It concludes with a list of witty remarks attributed to Castruccio but…
- mandrax (drug)
methaqualone, sedative-hypnotic drug that was historically used in the treatment of insomnia and anxiety and that became widely known as a recreational drug with a dangerously high potential for addiction. Today, in most countries worldwide, methaqualone has no accepted medical use and is illegal
- mandrel (technology)
mandrel, cylinder, usually steel, used to support a partly machined workpiece while it is being finished, or as a core around which parts may be bent or other material forged or molded. As a support during machining, the mandrel is usually slightly tapered so that when firmly pressed into a
- Mandrell, Barbara (American musician)
Barbara Mandrell is an American musician, ranked as one of country music’s most popular performers in the late 1970s and ’80s. Mandrell was also a successful actress, making regular appearances on television programs and starring in films and commercials. Mandrell began singing and playing musical
- mandrill (primate)
mandrill, (Mandrillus sphinx), colourful and primarily ground-dwelling monkey that inhabits the rainforests of equatorial Africa from the Sanaga River (Cameroon) southward to the Congo River. The mandrill is stout-bodied and has a short tail, prominent brow ridges, and small, close-set, sunken
- Mandrillus leucophaeus (primate)
drill, (Mandrillus leucophaeus), large short-tailed monkey found from southeastern Nigeria to western Cameroon and on Bioko Island. As a result of hunting and deforestation, the drill is now highly endangered. The drill, like the related mandrill, was formerly thought to be a forest-dwelling
- Mandrillus sphinx (primate)
mandrill, (Mandrillus sphinx), colourful and primarily ground-dwelling monkey that inhabits the rainforests of equatorial Africa from the Sanaga River (Cameroon) southward to the Congo River. The mandrill is stout-bodied and has a short tail, prominent brow ridges, and small, close-set, sunken
- Mands Himmerig (work by Ponoppidan)
Henrik Pontoppidan: His final novel, Mands Himmerig (1927; “Man’s Heaven”), describes neutral Denmark during World War I and attacks carefree materialism. His last important work was the four volumes of memoirs that he published between 1933 and 1940 and that appeared in a collected and abridged version, entitled Undervejs til…