• Partido Roldosista Ecuatoriano (political party, Ecuador)

    Abdalá Bucaram: …1982 Bucaram founded the leftist Ecuadoran Roldosist Party (Partido Roldosista Ecuatoriano; PRE), and two years later he was elected mayor of Guayaquil. His two terms in office (1984–92) were marked by controversy. Businessmen accused him of extortion; they claimed that he demanded money and harassed those who refused to pay.…

  • Partido Social Cristiano (political party, Venezuela)

    Luis Herrera Campíns: …party, also known as the Christian Democrats, became the second largest political party in Venezuela (after the Democratic Action party) in the decades after World War II. In 1952 Herrera Campíns was arrested and sent into exile as a result of his activities against the dictatorial regime of President Marcos…

  • Partido Social de Unidad Nacional (political party, Colombia)

    Colombia: Colombia in the 21st century: …the principal founders of the Social Party of National Unity (Partido Social de Unidad Nacional), which was created by supporters of Uribe, most of whom, like Uribe, had left the Liberal Party. In July 2010 relations with Colombia were severed by Venezuelan Pres. Hugo Chávez in response to Colombian allegations…

  • Partido Social Democrata (political party, Portugal)

    José Manuel Barroso: Barroso joined Portugal’s centre-right Social Democratic Party (Partido Social Democrata; PSD) in 1980. When the party’s Aníbal Cavaco Silva was elected prime minister in 1985, he appointed Barroso undersecretary of state for the home affairs ministry. Two years later Barroso moved to secretary of state for the ministry of…

  • Partido Socialista (political party, Chile)

    Chile: Government: …under its new name); the Socialist Party of Chile (Partido Socialista de Chile; PS); and the Party for Democracy (Partido por la Democracia; PPD). The Communist Party of Chile (Partido Comunista de Chile; PCC), which was condemned under Pinochet’s rule, was reinstated by 1990. The centre-right Alliance for Chile (Alianza…

  • Partido Socialista del Uruguay (political party, Uruguay)

    Tabaré Vázquez: A lifelong militant in the Uruguayan Socialist Party (Partido Socialista del Uruguay; PSU), Vázquez became a member of the party’s Central Committee in 1987. In 1989, as the candidate representing the Broad Front (Frente Amplio; FA), an alliance of leftist parties, he ran successfully for mayor of Montevideo, generally considered…

  • Partido Socialista Obrero Español (political party, Spain)

    Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party, Spanish socialist political party. Spain’s oldest political party, the PSOE was founded in 1879 by Pablo Iglesias, a Madrid typesetter and union organizer. Iglesias was also the founder in 1888 of the party’s affiliated trade union confederation, the General Union

  • Partido Socialista Popular (political party, Cuba)

    Communist Party of Cuba: The Cuban Communist Party (Partido Comunista Cubano) was founded in 1925 by Moscow-trained members of the Third International (Comintern). For three decades it adhered to the Stalinist line but, nevertheless, opportunistically collaborated with the regime of Fulgencio Batista in the 1940s and early ’50s, its members…

  • Partido Socialista Portuguesa (political party, Portugal)

    Mário Soares: …which later transformed into the Portuguese Socialist Party (Partido Socialista Portuguesa). By the time the army-imposed right-wing dictatorship fell in 1974, Soares had been jailed 12 times and had twice experienced exile, in São Tomé (1968) and Paris (1970–74).

  • Partido Socialista Unido de Venezuela (political party, Venezuela)

    Juan Guaidó: Acting presidency and attempts to displace Maduro: As a result, Maduro’s United Socialist Party of Venezuela (Partido Socialista Unido de Venezuela; PSUV) took nearly 68 percent of the vote, whereas the opposition parties that chose to participate took less than 18 percent. International organizations and observers were quick to label the elections a sham.

  • Partido Unidad Social Cristiana (political party, Costa Rica)

    Costa Rica: Political process: …often than not, and the Social Christian Unity Party (Partido Unidad Social Cristiana; PUSC). The former, founded by the moderate socialist José Figueres Ferrer in 1948, was largely responsible for establishing the health, education, and welfare reforms for which Costa Rica is noted. The PUSC, a four-party coalition formed in…

  • Partido Verde Ecologista de México (political party, Mexico)

    Mexico: Peña Nieto and the return of PRI rule: …election), and its ally, the Mexican Green Ecologist Party (Partido Verde Ecologista de México; PVEM), which captured about 7 percent, were poised to command a solid majority in the 500-seat Chamber of Deputies. Beyond the PRI’s triumph, the biggest story of the election was the victory of independent candidate Jaime…

  • partidos (sport format)

    jai alai: The game: …played outside the United States, partidos, is a match singles or doubles game to 10 to 40 points. Betting is on the eventual outcome of the game, at any time during the game. As the points fluctuate, so does the spread of the odds. The American game is adapted to…

  • Partidos por la Democracia, Concertación de los (political organization, Chile)

    Patricio Aylwin: …became the spokesperson for the Coalition of Parties for Democracy (Concertación de los Partidos por la Democracia; CPD). The CPD was a grouping of political parties created in February 1988, originally under the name Command for No (Comando por el No). After the resounding “no” vote that paved the way…

  • Partidul Comunist Român (political party, Romania)

    Romania: Political process: Before the 1989 revolution, the Communist Party of Romania was enshrined as the only legal political party and the leading force in Romanian society. The 1991 constitution replaced single-party rule with a democratic and pluralist system, but former communists have maintained prominence in politics through the formation of such parties…

  • Partidul Democrat (political party, Romania)

    Romania: New constitution: …coalition of parties, including the Democratic Party (Partidul Democrat; PD), whose Traian Băsescu was elected president.

  • Partidul Democrat-Liberal (political party, Romania)

    Romania: New constitution: …the leftist PSD and the Democratic Liberal Party (Partidul Democrat-Liberal; PDL), Băsescu’s new centrist party; the two parties formed a centre-left coalition government that December. This government lasted only until October 2009, when the PSD left the coalition in protest over the dismissal of a PSD member from a ministerial…

  • Partidul Democrației Sociale din România (political party, Romania)

    Romania: The revolution of 1989: …and Iliescu’s supporters formed the Democratic National Salvation Front (DNSF). The party maintained its political dominance, as evidenced by its successes in parliamentary and presidential elections held in September and October 1992, in which Iliescu was reelected and his party emerged as the largest in the parliament. A loose coalition…

  • Partidul Social Democrat (political party, Romania)

    Romania: New constitution: …PDSR was reorganized as the Social Democratic Party (Partidul Social Democrat; PSD). In 2004 it was ousted from power by another centre-right coalition of parties, including the Democratic Party (Partidul Democrat; PD), whose Traian Băsescu was elected president.

  • Partie de campagne, Une (film by Renoir)

    Jean Renoir: Early years: …Partie de campagne (released 1946; A Day in the Country), which he finished with great difficulty. A masterpiece of impressionist cinema, this film presents all the poetry and all the charm of the pictorial sense that is, far more than his technique, the basis of his art as a filmmaker.…

  • Partie de Cartes, La (work by Léger)

    Fernand Léger: That year he completed The Card Party, which was based on sketches of his fellow soldiers. He regarded this work as “the first picture in which I deliberately took my subject from our own epoch.”

  • Parties for Democracy, Coalition of (political organization, Chile)

    Patricio Aylwin: …became the spokesperson for the Coalition of Parties for Democracy (Concertación de los Partidos por la Democracia; CPD). The CPD was a grouping of political parties created in February 1988, originally under the name Command for No (Comando por el No). After the resounding “no” vote that paved the way…

  • parties in interest (law)

    procedural law: Parties: …is frequently called the real party in interest rule, and similar rules exist in other countries (e.g., Italy and France). The real party in interest ordinarily will be the person who will ultimately benefit from any recovery obtained. In matters of public law, the ability to sue is sometimes restricted…

  • parties, conference of the (international relations)

    conference of the parties (COP), a generic term that refers to the governing body of an international treaty or framework convention, bringing together its members to review and update the treaty’s implementation. Although the United Nations hosts several such conferences on various topics,

  • parties, joinder of (law)

    joinder and impleader: Joinder of parties is the assertion of claims for or against parties in addition to a single plaintiff and single defendant. Impleading occurs when a third party—against whom the defendant may himself have a claim—is brought into the original suit in the interests of time…

  • Partij van de Arbeid (political party, Netherlands)

    Netherlands: The late 20th century: …parties, which continued until the Labour Party went into opposition in 1958. Thereafter, with the exception of 1973–77, when the country had a left-led government, and 1981–82 and 1989–91, when it was ruled by a center-left coalition, governments were formed by center-right coalitions. After the early 1980s the government was…

  • Partij voor de Vrijheid (political party, Netherlands)

    Euroskepticism: The emergence of Euroskeptic parties: … in France and the Dutch Party for Freedom (Partij voor de Vrijheid; PVV). Although the National Front and the PVV were known primarily for promoting anti-immigration and anti-Islamic policies, both were quick to capitalize on populist sentiment in the wake of the euro-zone debt crisis. In November 2013 National Front…

  • partimen (literature)

    partimen, a lyric poem of dispute composed by Provençal troubadours in which one poet stated a proposition and a second disputed it. The first poet then defended his position, and the debate continued, usually for three rounds, after which the question was presented to an arbiter for resolution.

  • Partindo (political party, Indonesia)

    Indonesia: The rise of nationalism: …Indonesian Nationalist Association, later the Indonesian Nationalist Party (Partai Nasional Indonesia; PNI), was formed under the chairmanship of Sukarno. The PNI was based on the idea of noncooperation with the government of the East Indies and was thus distinguished from those groups, such as Sarekat Islam, that were prepared to…

  • parting (metallurgy)

    parting, in metallurgy, the separation of gold and silver by chemical or electrochemical means. Gold and silver are often extracted together from the same ores or recovered as by-products from the extraction of other metals. A solid mixture of the two, known as bullion, or doré, can be parted by

  • Parting Glances (film by Sherwood [1986])

    Steve Buscemi: Film career: Reservoir Dogs, Fargo, and The Big Lebowski: An exception was Parting Glances (1986), one of the first movies to address the AIDS crisis. Both the film and Buscemi’s performance were praised. Then in 1990 he was cast in the small but memorable role of Mink in Miller’s Crossing, a gangster drama set during Prohibition and…

  • Parting Glass, The (film by Moyer [2018])

    Anna Paquin: …Kenneth Lonergan’s Margaret (2011), and The Parting Glass (2018). In 2019 she portrayed the daughter of a hit man (played by Robert De Niro) in Martin Scorsese’s The Irishman; the mob drama received a theatrical release before airing on Netflix. Paquin later was cast in American Underdog, a biopic about…

  • Parting of Jean Calas from His Family, The (painting by Chodowiecki)

    Daniel Chodowiecki: …success with the sentimental painting The Parting of Jean Calas from His Family (1767), which shows the influence of Greuze. Chodowiecki began engraving in 1758. After engraving several subjects from the story of the Seven Years’ War, Chodowiecki produced the famous History of the Life of Jesus Christ. Many books…

  • Parting of the Waters

    There is a line that divides the Americas in two—not the border between continents North and South but a vertical line through their middles. It travels southward from the tip of the state of Alaska through the frost-coated Canadian wilderness, on and over the Rocky Mountains, and deep beyond the

  • Partir (novel by Ben Jelloun)

    Tahar Ben Jelloun: …men, and in Partir (2005; Leaving Tangier), he focused on two Moroccan siblings who must navigate an array of social and personal challenges after immigrating to Spain. Au pays (2009; A Palace in the Old Village) explores Muslim identity through the struggles of a Moroccan French retiree who returns to…

  • Partisan (Yugoslavian military force)

    Partisan, member of a guerrilla force led by the Communist Party of Yugoslavia during World War II against the Axis powers, their Yugoslav collaborators, and a rival resistance force, the royalist Chetniks. Germany and Italy occupied Yugoslavia in April 1941, but it was not until Germany invaded

  • partisan group

    political party, a group of persons organized to acquire and exercise political power. Political parties originated in their modern form in Europe and the United States in the 19th century, along with the electoral and parliamentary systems, whose development reflects the evolution of parties. The

  • Partisan Review (American magazine)

    Clement Greenberg: …the fall 1939 issue of Partisan Review. In this essay Greenberg, an avowed Trotskyite Marxist, claimed that avant-garde Modernism was “the only living culture that we now have” and that it was threatened primarily by the emergence of sentimentalized “kitsch” productions—“the debased and academicized simulacra of genuine culture.” For Greenberg,…

  • Partisans (dance)

    Igor Moiseyev: …this game; and the well-known Partisans, with its representations of guerrilla warfare and men on horseback. His Bulba so effectively re-created the folklore of Belorussia that it was adopted as that region’s national dance. After 1955 the ensemble toured France, England, Egypt, Japan, and the United States; it continued to…

  • partisanship (politics)

    partisanship, in democratic politics and government, a strong adherence, dedication, or loyalty to a political party—or to an ideology or agenda associated with a political party—usually accompanied by a negative view of an opposing party. Extreme partisanship is generally regarded as detrimental

  • Partit Laburista (political party, Malta)

    Eddie Fenech Adami: …of rule by the socialist Malta Labour Party, in the 1987 elections the Nationalist Party won a majority in the parliament, and on May 12 Fenech Adami became prime minister. He attempted to eliminate the polarization that divided Malta, initiate a policy of open government, and create a program of…

  • Partit Nazzjonalista (political party, Malta)

    Malta: Modern history: …Malta was governed by the Nationalist Party (Partit Nazzjonalista; PN), which pursued a policy of firm alignment with the West. In 1971, however, the Malta Labour Party (Partit Laburista; MLP) came to power, embracing a policy of nonalignment and aggressively asserting Malta’s sovereignty. The MLP formed a special friendship with…

  • partition (of a set)

    partition, in mathematics and logic, division of a set of objects into a family of subsets that are mutually exclusive and jointly exhaustive; that is, no element of the original set is present in more than one of the subsets, and all the subsets together contain all the members of the original

  • partition (architecture)

    wall, structural element used to divide or enclose, and, in building construction, to form the periphery of a room or a building. In traditional masonry construction, walls supported the weight of floors and roofs, but modern steel and reinforced concrete frames, as well as heavy timber and other

  • partition (of an integer)

    combinatorics: Partitions: A partition of a positive integer n is a representation of n as a sum of positive integers n = x1 + x2 +⋯+ xk, xi ≥ 1, i = 1, 2,…, k. The numbers xi are called the

  • partition chromatography (chemical process)

    chromatography: Early developments: …technique came to be called partition chromatography. At that time, Martin and Synge suggested that the moving phase could well be a gas. It is a historical oddity that this idea was overlooked for nearly a decade, possibly because of the war, until Martin in collaboration with the British chemist…

  • partition coefficient (biology)

    cell: Permeation: …unit of measure called the partition coefficient. The greater the solubility of a substance, the higher its partition coefficient, and the higher the partition coefficient, the higher the permeability of the membrane to that particular substance. For example, the water solubility of hydroxyl, carboxyl, and amino groups reduces their solubility…

  • partition line (heraldry)

    heraldry: Other charges: Partition lines divide the shield. The most common ones are straight. Impalement means the division of the shield into two equal parts by a straight line from the top to bottom. That method is used to show either the arms of husband and wife, the…

  • Partition of Africa (African history)

    Scramble for Africa, a phrase widely used to refer to the period from the late 19th to the early 20th century in which European imperial powers claimed control of most African territory. It is also used to describe the actions undertaken by those countries, with the goals of expanding strategic

  • partition, line of (heraldry)

    heraldry: Other charges: Partition lines divide the shield. The most common ones are straight. Impalement means the division of the shield into two equal parts by a straight line from the top to bottom. That method is used to show either the arms of husband and wife, the…

  • Partition, Treaty of (Europe [1668])

    War of Devolution: …in January 1668 concluded a treaty with the Holy Roman emperor Leopold I whereby they agreed to partition the Spanish dominions between themselves on the Spanish king’s death and in which it was also stipulated how much territory in the meantime France was to annex in the Netherlands. The French…

  • Partitioned Zone (territory, Kuwait-Saudi Arabia)

    Kuwait: Land: …of the territory (called the Neutral, or Partitioned, Zone), but they continue to share equally the revenues from oil production in the entire area. Although the boundary with Saudi Arabia is defined, the border with Iraq remains in dispute.

  • partitioning (gas transport)

    poison: Inhalation: …move into the blood by partitioning, which is a gas-transfer process between two phases, such as between the air and the blood or the blood and the tissues. In partitioning, gas molecules move from a phase of high partial pressure to an adjacent phase of low partial pressure. When an…

  • partitioning (politics)

    20th-century international relations: South Asia: …only six months, and the partition of the subcontinent into a mainly Hindu India and a mainly Muslim but divided Pakistan (including part of Bengal in the east) at midnight on August 14–15, 1947, was accompanied by panicky flight and riots between Hindus and Muslims that claimed between 200,000 and…

  • Partito Comunista Italiano (political party, Italy)

    Democrats of the Left, former Italian political party and historically western Europe’s largest communist party. The party was originally founded in January 1921 as the Italian Communist Party (Partito Comunista Italiano; PCI) by dissidents of the extreme left wing of the Italian Socialist Party

  • Partito della Rifondazione Comunista (political party, Italy)

    Democrats of the Left: …dissident communists formed the more-orthodox Communist Refoundation Party (Partito della Rifondazione Comunista), and thousands left the party.

  • Partito Democratico (political party, Italy)

    Italian Popular Party: …folded into the new centre-left Democratic Party (Partito Democratico).

  • Partito Democratico-Cristiano Popolare Svizzero (political party, Switzerland)

    Christian Democratic People’s Party, Swiss centre-right political party that endorses Christian democratic principles. With FDP. The Liberals, the Social Democratic Party, and the Swiss People’s Party, the Christian Democratic People’s Party (CVP) has governed Switzerland as part of a grand

  • Partito Liberale Italiano (political party, Italy)

    Italian Liberal Party, moderately conservative Italian political party that dominated Italian political life in the decades after unification (1861) and was a minor party in the period after World War II. The Liberal Party was first formed as a parliamentary group within the Piedmont assembly in

  • Partito Liberale-Radicale Svizzero (political party, Switzerland)

    FDP. The Liberals, centrist political party of Switzerland formed in 2009 by the merger of the Radical Democratic Party (German: Freisinnig-Demokratische Partei der Schweiz [FDP]) and the Liberal Party (German: Liberale Partei der Schweiz [LPS]). FDP. The Liberals assumed the role previously held

  • Partito Nazionale Fascista (political party, Italy)

    Fascist Party (PNF), political party formed by Benito Mussolini in November 1921 and dissolved in 1943 after he was deposed. It served as the political instrument for the Italian fascist movement and Mussolini, its leader. From 1922 to 1943, a period referred to as the ventennio fascista (“twenty

  • Partito Popolare Italiano (political party, Italy)

    Italian Popular Party, former centrist Italian political party whose several factions were united by their Roman Catholicism and anticommunism. They advocated programs ranging from social reform to the defense of free enterprise. The DC usually dominated Italian politics from World War II until the

  • Partito Radicale (political party, Italy)

    Italy: Years of crisis: …by Felice Cavallotti and the Radical group in parliament, who in the 1890s strongly denounced bank scandals, tariff protectionism, colonial wars, and the Triple Alliance. The Radicals were a northern, anticlerical, moralistic group that denounced the corruption of the south (Crispi was the first southern prime minister), of the monarchy,…

  • Partito Repubblicano Italiano (political party, Italy)

    Italian Republican Party, anticlerical social-reform party. Although it had only a small following in the years after World War II, its position in the centre of the Italian political spectrum enabled it to take part in many coalition governments. The party dates back to the 19th century, when

  • Partito Socialista dei Lavoratori Italiani (political party, Italy)

    Giuseppe Saragat: …statesman and founder of the Socialist Party of Italian Workers (PSLI), who held many ministerial posts from 1944 to 1964, when he became president of the Italian Republic (1964–71).

  • Partito Socialista Democratico Italiano (political party, Italy)

    Italian Democratic Socialist Party, anticommunist reform party advocating the nationalization of some industries. As a centre party, it was able to join many Italian governments in the decades after World War II. In early 1947, socialists who opposed the Italian Socialist Party (PSI) for its

  • Partito Socialista Italiano (political party, Italy)

    Italian Socialist Party, former Italian political party, one of the first Italian parties with a national scope and a modern democratic organization. It was founded in 1892 in Genoa as the Italian Workers’ Party (Partito dei Lavoratori Italiani) and formally adopted the name Italian Socialist Party

  • Partito Socialista Svizzero (political party, Switzerland)

    Social Democratic Party of Switzerland, Swiss political party of the centre-left that supports an extensive government role in the economy. With the Christian Democratic People’s Party, FDP. The Liberals, and the Swiss People’s Party, the Social Democratic Party has governed Switzerland as part of

  • Partito Socialista Unita (political party, Italy)

    Italian Socialist Party, former Italian political party, one of the first Italian parties with a national scope and a modern democratic organization. It was founded in 1892 in Genoa as the Italian Workers’ Party (Partito dei Lavoratori Italiani) and formally adopted the name Italian Socialist Party

  • Partiya Karkeran Kurdistan (Kurdish militant organization)

    Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), militant Kurdish nationalist organization founded by Abdullah (“Apo”) Öcalan in the late 1970s. Although the group initially espoused demands for the establishment of an independent Kurdish state, its stated aims were later tempered to calls for greater Kurdish

  • Partiya Narodnoy Svobody (Russian political party)

    Kadet, a Russian political party advocating a radical change in Russian government toward a constitutional monarchy like Great Britain’s. It was founded in October 1905 by the Union of Liberation and other liberals associated with the zemstvos, local councils that often were centres of liberal

  • Partizan (Yugoslavian military force)

    Partisan, member of a guerrilla force led by the Communist Party of Yugoslavia during World War II against the Axis powers, their Yugoslav collaborators, and a rival resistance force, the royalist Chetniks. Germany and Italy occupied Yugoslavia in April 1941, but it was not until Germany invaded

  • Partizansk (Russia)

    Partizansk, city, Primorsky kray (territory), far eastern Russia. It lies in the valley of the Partizanskaya River. It was formed in 1932 by the amalgamation of mining settlements that developed near mine shafts in a bituminous coal basin. A thermal power station serving the region is located in

  • Partizánske (Slovakia)

    Slovakia: Settlement patterns: Partizánske and Nová Dubnica, both in the west, are examples of new towns founded, respectively, just before and after World War II.

  • Partners in Health

    Paul Farmer: …administrator who, as cofounder of Partners in Health (PIH), was known for his efforts to provide medical care in impoverished countries.

  • partnership (business)

    A partnership is a business owned by two or more people who agree to share its profits and losses. Each partner provides labor, skills, money, or property to the business. Partnerships are among the oldest forms of business organization and are still common for small and midsize enterprises,

  • Partnership for Peace Programme (international relations)

    Ukraine: Kuchma’s presidency: In 1994 Ukraine joined the Partnership for Peace Programme run by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO); the country also established a “special partnership” with the organization in 1996. In 1995 Ukraine joined the Council of Europe.

  • partnership pinochle (card game)

    pinochle: Partnership pinochle: Four play in two partnerships, with partners sitting opposite each other. All the cards are dealt out in four rounds of three cards. Each side’s aim is to score 100 or more points over as many deals as necessary. Points are scored for…

  • parton (subatomic particle)

    subatomic particle: The development of quark theory: …pointlike objects, which were named partons because they are parts of the larger particles. The experiments also showed that the partons can indeed have fractional charges of + 2 3 e or − 1 3 e and thus confirmed one of the more surprising predictions of the quark model.

  • Parton, Dolly (American musician and actress)

    Dolly Parton is an American country music singer-songwriter, guitarist, and actress who pioneered the interface between country and pop music styles and became one of the most iconic entertainment figures of the late 20th century. Equal parts sensitive songwriter and savvy businesswoman, Parton

  • Parton, Dolly Rebecca (American musician and actress)

    Dolly Parton is an American country music singer-songwriter, guitarist, and actress who pioneered the interface between country and pop music styles and became one of the most iconic entertainment figures of the late 20th century. Equal parts sensitive songwriter and savvy businesswoman, Parton

  • Parton, James (American author)

    biography: 19th century: One professional biographer, James Parton, published competent, well-researched narratives, such as his lives of Aaron Burr and Andrew Jackson, but they brought him thin rewards and are today outmoded. In France, biography was turned inward, to romantic introspection, a trend introduced by Étienne Pivert de Senancour’s Obermann (1804).…

  • Parton, Sara Payson Willis (American author and newspaper writer)

    Sara Payson Willis Parton was an American novelist and newspaper writer, one of the first woman columnists, known for her satiric commentary on contemporary society. Grata Payson Willis early changed her first name to Sara. Her family had a strong literary and journalistic tradition: her father,

  • Partonopier und Meliur (work by Konrad von Würzburg)

    Konrad von Würzburg: …to full-scale epics, such as Partonopier und Meliur, on the fairy-lover theme, and Der Trojanerkrieg (The Trojan War), an account of the Trojan War. He is at his best in his shorter narrative poems, the secular romances Engelhart, Dasz Herzmaere (The Heart’s Tidings), and Keiser Otte mit dem Barte (Kaiser…

  • partridge (bird)

    partridge, any of many small game birds native to the Old World and belonging to the family Phasianidae (order Galliformes). They are larger than quails, with stronger bills and feet. (For New World birds erroneously called partridges, see grouse; quail. For dwarf partridges of India called bush

  • Partridge Family, The (American television series)

    The Brady Bunch: …cue from the success of The Partridge Family (1970–74), another popular situation comedy, which centred on a large family that also happened to be a rock group. The Brady cast went on to record commercial albums and perform live.

  • Partridge, Eric (British lexicographer)

    Eric Partridge was a New Zealand-born English lexicographer, best known for his A Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English (1937). (Read H.L. Mencken’s 1926 Britannica essay on American English.) Partridge served with the Australian Infantry in World War I and with the Royal Air Force in

  • Partridge, Eric Honeywood (British lexicographer)

    Eric Partridge was a New Zealand-born English lexicographer, best known for his A Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English (1937). (Read H.L. Mencken’s 1926 Britannica essay on American English.) Partridge served with the Australian Infantry in World War I and with the Royal Air Force in

  • partridgeberry (plant)

    partridgeberry, (Mitchella repens), North American plant of the madder family (Rubiaceae), growing in dry woods from southwestern Newfoundland westward to Minnesota and southward to Florida and Texas. Partridgeberry is a good wild-garden plant for shady places and is popular in winter terrariums

  • parts, integration by (mathematics)

    gamma function: …technique from calculus known as integration by parts, it can be proved that the gamma function has the following recursive property: if x > 0, then Γ(x + 1) = xΓ(x). From this it follows that Γ(2) = 1 Γ(1) = 1; Γ(3) = 2 Γ(2) = 2 × 1…

  • Partulacea (gastropod superfamily)

    gastropod: Classification: Superfamily Partulacea Small, generally arboreal snails found on high volcanic islands of Polynesia and Micronesia, a few in Melanesia. Order Mesurethra Ureter represented by lateral opening of very short kidney, pore of ureter opening near or behind middle of mantle cavity; about 1,500 species. Superfamily

  • parturient paresis (animal disease)

    parturient paresis, in cattle, a disorder characterized by abnormally low levels of calcium in the blood (hypocalcemia). It occurs in cows most commonly within three days after they have calved, at a time when the cow’s production of milk has put a severe strain on its calcium stores.

  • parturition (biology)

    birth, process of bringing forth a child from the uterus, or womb. The prior development of the child in the uterus is described in the article human embryology. The process and series of changes that take place in a woman’s organs and tissues as a result of the developing fetus are discussed in

  • party (law)

    procedural law: Parties: Every civil lawsuit involves at least two parties—a plaintiff making a claim and a defendant resisting it. Beyond this basic requirement, legal systems differ slightly in their approach to the question of whether other parties may or must be joined.

  • party (social event)

    rock: Rock and youth culture: Moreover, rock became multifunctional—dance and party music on the one hand, a matter of serious attention and intimate expression on the other. As rock spread globally this had different implications in different countries, but in general it allowed rock to continue to define itself as youthful even as its performers…

  • Party Ain’t Over, The (album by Jackson)

    Wanda Jackson: …a comeback with the album The Party Ain’t Over (2011), which was produced by Jack White of the White Stripes, and she followed that with Unfinished Business (2012). In 2019 Jackson announced that she was retiring from performing, citing “health and safety” issues; it was subsequently revealed that she had…

  • Party for Freedom (political party, Netherlands)

    Euroskepticism: The emergence of Euroskeptic parties: … in France and the Dutch Party for Freedom (Partij voor de Vrijheid; PVV). Although the National Front and the PVV were known primarily for promoting anti-immigration and anti-Islamic policies, both were quick to capitalize on populist sentiment in the wake of the euro-zone debt crisis. In November 2013 National Front…

  • Party Girl (film by Ray [1958])

    Nicholas Ray: Films of the late 1950s: Party Girl (1958) was a return to the crime genre, starring Cyd Charisse as a 1920s Chicago showgirl who questions her ties to a syndicate boss (Lee J. Cobb) when a mob lawyer (Robert Taylor) wants her to make a break with him.

  • Party Monster (film by Bailey and Barbato [2003])

    Macaulay Culkin: Return to acting: …movie as an adult was Party Monster (2003), in which he played the murderous party promoter Michael Alig. It was closely followed by his role in Saved! (2004), a comedy in which he played a high-school student whose sister is a Christian zealot. Later films included Sex and Breakfast (2007),…

  • Party of Labour of Albania (political party, Albania)

    Enver Hoxha: …communists helped Hoxha found the Albanian Communist Party (afterward called the Party of Labour). Hoxha became first secretary of the party’s Central Committee and political commissar of the communist-dominated Army of National Liberation. He was prime minister of Albania from its liberation in 1944 until 1954, simultaneously holding the ministry…