• Sleep and Poetry (poem by Keats)

    John Keats: Early works: …in this volume is “Sleep and Poetry,” the middle section of which contains a prophetic view of Keats’s own poetical progress. He sees himself as, at present, plunged in the delighted contemplation of sensuous natural beauty but realizes that he must leave this for an understanding of “the agony…

  • sleep apnea (pathology)

    sleep apnea, respiratory condition characterized by pauses in breathing during sleep. The word apnea is derived from the Greek apnoia, meaning “without breath.” There are three types of sleep apnea: obstructive, which is the most common form and involves the collapse of tissues of the upper airway;

  • sleep cycle (physiology)

    thalamus: Medical significance: …plays an essential role in sleep-wake regulation and arousal. As a result, thalamic pathology has been implicated in coma and related disorders of consciousness, such as vegetative and minimally conscious states, where deep brain stimulation has been tested therapeutically. The thalamus plays an important role in generating normal sleep thalamocortical…

  • sleep deprivation

    hallucination: Loss of sleep: Progressive sleep loss appears to decrease one’s capacity for integrating realistic perceptions of the external environment. Hallucinations probably will occur in anyone if wakefulness is sufficiently prolonged; anxiety is likely to hasten or to enhance hallucinatory production. (The disorganizing effect of sleep deprivation has…

  • sleep disorder

    myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome: Suspected causes, diagnosis, and treatment: sleep disorders, confusion, and memory loss. Symptoms are often similar in appearance to those of other conditions and tend to come and go or may fluctuate in severity over time. Thus, diagnosis of ME/CFS further requires all other illnesses or medical conditions associated with the…

  • Sleep It Off Lady (short stories by Rhys)

    Jean Rhys: …the Left Bank (1968) and Sleep It Off Lady (1976), both short-story collections, followed. Smile Please, an unfinished autobiography, was published in 1979.

  • Sleep of Memory (novel by Modiano)

    Patrick Modiano: …novels included Souvenirs dormants (2017; Sleep of Memory) and Encre sympathique (2019; Invisible Ink).

  • sleep of the soul (religion)

    Christianity: Concepts of life after death: …view, therefore, also prevailed: the sleep of the soul—i.e., the soul of the dead person enters into a sleeping state that continues until the Last Judgment, which will occur after the general resurrection. At the Last Judgment the resurrected will be assigned either to eternal life or eternal damnation. This…

  • sleep paralysis (physiology)

    sleep paralysis, total inability to move for a very brief period that occurs as one is either falling asleep or awakening from sleep. Sleep paralysis can affect individuals of any age, and many people experience an episode at some point in their lifetime. Teenagers and young adults and persons with

  • sleep spindle (physiology)

    neural oscillation: Types of brain rhythms: …the absence of movement, while transient beta oscillations (or sleep spindles) are present in the thalamocortical system during the early stages of sleep. Gamma oscillations (30–120 Hz) are present in nearly all structures and all brain states, although they dominate in the aroused, attentive brain. The transient ripple pattern (130–200…

  • sleep talking

    sleep: Behavioral variables: …or a substitute for them, sleep talking and sleepwalking occur primarily in NREM sleep. Episodes of NREM sleepwalking generally do not seem to be associated with any remembered dreams, nor is NREM sleep talking consistently associated with reported dreams of related content.

  • sleep terror (mental disorder)

    mental disorder: Other childhood disorders: inappropriate places), sleepwalking, and night terror. These symptoms are not necessarily evidence of emotional disturbance or of some other mental illness. Behavioral methods of treatment are usually effective.

  • Sleep, My Love (film by Sirk [1948])

    Douglas Sirk: Hollywood films of the 1940s: Sleep, My Love (1948) was a stylish film noir reminiscent of Gaslight (1944), with Don Ameche cast against type as the husband trying to drive his wife (Claudette Colbert) insane. The musical comedy Slightly French (1949) paired Ameche with Dorothy Lamour.

  • Sleep, Wayne (British dancer)

    entrechat: …English television as danced by Wayne Sleep.

  • sleep-schedule disorder (medicine)

    sleep: Circadian rhythm disorders: …are two prominent types of sleep-schedule disorders: phase-advanced sleep and phase-delayed sleep. In the former the sleep onset and offset occur earlier than the social norms, and in the latter sleep onset is delayed and waking is also later in the day than is desirable. Phase-delayed sleep is a common…

  • sleeper (railroad track)

    railroad: Sleepers (crossties): Timber has been used for railroad sleepers or ties almost from the beginning, and it is still the most common material for this purpose. The modern wood sleeper is treated with preservative chemical to improve its life. The cost of wood ties has risen…

  • sleeper (railroad vehicle)

    sleeping car, railroad coach designed for overnight passenger travel. The first sleeping cars were put in service on American railroads as early as the 1830s, but these were makeshift; the first car designed for comfortable nighttime travel was the Pullman sleeper, which was commercially introduced

  • Sleeper (film by Allen [1973])

    Woody Allen: The 1970s: Sleeper (1973), a far more cohesive satire, featured Allen in the role of a neurotic health-food mogul who goes into the hospital for a simple operation and awakens 200 years later to learn that doctors had frozen him and that he is now a stranger…

  • sleeper (fish)

    sleeper, any of the marine and freshwater fishes of the family Eleotridae of the suborder Gobioidei (order Perciformes). Sleepers, found in warm and tropical regions, are so named because most species habitually lie quietly on the bottom. They are elongated fishes with two dorsal fins and are

  • sleeper shark (fish)

    chondrichthyan: Sharks: Sleeper sharks (Somniosus), which occur mainly in polar and subpolar regions, are known to feed on fishes, small whales, squid, crabs, seals, and carrion from whaling stations. Many bottom-dwelling sharks, such as the smooth dogfishes (Triakis and Mustelus), take crabs, lobsters, and other crustaceans, as…

  • Sleepers (film by Levinson [1996])

    Barry Levinson: …films include the revenge thriller Sleepers (1996), the political satire Wag the Dog (1997), the coming-of-age story Liberty Heights (1999), the political thriller Man of the Year (2006), and the comedy Rock the Kasbah (2015).

  • Sleepers in Moon-Crowned Valleys (work by Purdy)

    James Purdy: In his trilogy, Sleepers in Moon-Crowned Valleys—consisting of Jeremy’s Vision (1970), The House of the Solitary Maggot (1974), and Mourners Below (1981)—Purdy explores small-town American life and destructive family relationships.

  • Sleepers Joining Hands (poetry by Bly)

    Robert Bly: …poems and prose poems included Sleepers Joining Hands (1973), This Body Is Made of Camphor and Gopherwood (1977), This Tree Will Be Here for a Thousand Years (1979), Morning Poems (1997), and Eating the Honey of Words (1999). His poems of The Man in the Black Coat Turns (1981) explore…

  • Sleeping Bear Dunes (dunes, Michigan, United States)

    Sleeping Bear Dunes, large complex of shifting sand dunes, extending 7 miles (11 km) along the northeastern shore of Lake Michigan between Empire and Glen Haven, in the northwestern part of the Lower Peninsula of Michigan, U.S. The name derives from an Ojibwa Indian legend in which a mother bear

  • Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore (national park, Michigan, United States)

    Sleeping Bear Dunes: Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore, authorized in 1970 and established in 1977, encompasses 111 square miles (287 square km). It stretches for some 35 miles (55 km) along the shoreline and includes the wilderness areas of North Manitou and South Manitou islands (accessible by ferry…

  • Sleeping Beauties (novel by Stephen and Owen King)

    Stephen King: Personal life and honors: With Owen King he wrote Sleeping Beauties (2017), in which women become wrapped in cocoons when they fall asleep.

  • Sleeping Beauty Castle (building, Urayasu, Japan)

    Neuschwanstein Castle: …served as inspiration for Disneyland’s Sleeping Beauty Castle.

  • Sleeping Beauty Novels, The (work by Rice)

    Anne Rice: Erotic novels and the Mayfair witches: Eroticism distinguished The Sleeping Beauty series—four stories (1983–85 and 2015) published under the pseudonym A.N. Roquelaure, which some critics classified as “pornography”—and two novels she published as Anne Rampling, Exit to Eden (1985; film 1994) and Belinda (1986).

  • Sleeping Beauty, The (poem by Sitwell)

    Edith Sitwell: … (1918), Bucolic Comedies (1923), and The Sleeping Beauty (1924), in which she created her own world of beautiful objects, nursery symbols, and unfamiliar images, revealed the influence of W.B. Yeats and T.S. Eliot. Her emphasis on the value of sound in poetry was shown especially in Façade (1923), for which…

  • Sleeping Beauty, The (ballet by Tchaikovsky)

    Léon Bakst: …production of Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky’s The Sleeping Beauty (also called The Sleeping Princess). It proved to be his last major work. He visited the United States in 1922–23, where, among other projects, he designed a private theatre (restored 1990) for Evergreen House (now the Evergreen Museum and Library), the Baltimore…

  • sleeping car (railroad vehicle)

    sleeping car, railroad coach designed for overnight passenger travel. The first sleeping cars were put in service on American railroads as early as the 1830s, but these were makeshift; the first car designed for comfortable nighttime travel was the Pullman sleeper, which was commercially introduced

  • Sleeping Car Murders, The (film by Costa-Gavras [1965])

    Costa-Gavras: …first film, Compartiment tueurs (1965; The Sleeping Car Murders), was a detective thriller. His second, 1 homme de trop (1967; “One Man Too Many”; Shock Troops), a World War II drama, had good reviews, but it was his next film, Z (1969), a powerfully dramatic description of political assassination in…

  • Sleeping Car Porters and Maids, Brotherhood of (American labor union)

    Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters (BSCP), first African American labour union to be affiliated with the American Federation of Labor. Founded in 1925 by labour organizer and civil rights activist A. Philip Randolph, the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters (BSCP) aimed to improve the working

  • Sleeping Fury, The (poetry by Bogan)

    Louise Bogan: Poetry and criticism: …while publishing Dark Summer (1929), The Sleeping Fury (1937), and Poems and New Poems (1941). Her verse has been frequently compared to that of the English Metaphysical poets in its restrained, intellectual style, its compressed diction and imagery, and its formal concerns. Yet it is modern, both deeply personal and…

  • Sleeping Muse (sculpture by Constantin Brancusi)

    Constantin Brancusi: Early life and works: …the first version of the Sleeping Muse, a sculpture of a woman’s face in which the features suggest an unformed block of marble. Also in 1908 Brancusi executed his first truly original work, The Kiss, in which the vertical figures of two entwined adolescents form a closed volume with symmetrical…

  • Sleeping Princess, The (ballet by Tchaikovsky)

    Léon Bakst: …production of Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky’s The Sleeping Beauty (also called The Sleeping Princess). It proved to be his last major work. He visited the United States in 1922–23, where, among other projects, he designed a private theatre (restored 1990) for Evergreen House (now the Evergreen Museum and Library), the Baltimore…

  • sleeping sickness (disease)

    encephalitis lethargica, form of encephalitis that emerged in the early 20th century. An encephalitis lethargica epidemic occurred from 1915 to 1928. The disease was first described medically in 1917, though numerous possible forerunners dating back to the 16th century have been identified.

  • sleeping sickness (disease, trypanosomiasis)

    sleeping sickness, disease caused by infection with the flagellate protozoan Trypanosoma brucei gambiense or the closely related subspecies T. brucei rhodesiense, transmitted by the tsetse fly (genus Glossina). Sleeping sickness is characterized by two stages of illness. In the first stage,

  • Sleeping Venus (painting by Giorgione)

    Titian: Early life and works: …landscape background to Giorgione’s unfinished Sleeping Venus, a fact recorded by a contemporary writer, Marcantonio Michiel. Still Giorgionesque is the somewhat more lush setting of Titian’s Baptism of Christ (c. 1515), in which the donor, Giovanni Ram, appears at the lower right.

  • Sleeping with the Enemy (film by Ruben [1991])

    Julia Roberts: …1990s, starring in Flatliners (1990), Sleeping with the Enemy (1991), The Pelican Brief (1993), Something to Talk About (1995), Mary Reilly (1996), My Best Friend’s Wedding (1997), and Stepmom (1998), for which she also served as executive producer. Her personal life at times overshadowed her professional

  • Sleepless (film by Odar [2017])

    Jamie Foxx: Dreamgirls and Django Unchained: …film credits from 2017 included Sleepless, in which he played an undercover police officer whose teenaged son is kidnapped by gangsters, and Baby Driver, an action comedy about bank robbers.

  • Sleepless in Seattle (film by Ephron [1993])

    Nora Ephron: …Harry Met Sally… (1989) and Sleepless in Seattle (1993). She also directed the latter film, which starred Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan. After several critical and commercial failures, Ephron returned to Sleepless in Seattle’s winning formula in the late 1990s, once again pairing Hanks and Ryan in the romantic comedy…

  • Sleeps with Angels (album by Young)

    Neil Young: Harvest, Rust Never Sleeps, and Harvest Moon: His next significant album, Sleeps with Angels (1994), was a meditation on death that mixes ballads with more-typical Crazy Horse-backed rockers.

  • Sleepwalk with Me (film by Birbiglia and Barrish [2012])

    Ira Glass: …cowrote and produced the film Sleepwalk with Me (2012), an adaptation of a one-man show starring comedian (and frequent This American Life contributor) Mike Birbiglia. Glass also was a producer on Birbiglia’s film Don’t Think Twice (2016), which was about a New York City improv comedy troupe.

  • Sleepwalker, The (work by Bellini)

    Vincenzo Bellini: …and Juliet; La sonnambula (1831; The Sleepwalker); and Norma (1831). La sonnambula, an opera semiseria (serious but with a happy ending), became very popular, even in England, where an English version appeared. Bellini’s masterpiece, Norma, a tragedy set in ancient Gaul, achieved lasting success despite an initial failure.

  • Sleepwalkers, The (novels by Broch)

    The Sleepwalkers, trilogy of novels by Hermann Broch, published in German in three volumes as Die Schlafwandler in 1931–32. The multilayered novels chronicle the dissolution of the fabric of European society from 1888 to the end of World War I and the consequent victory of the realist over the

  • sleepwalking (psychology)

    sleepwalking, a behavioral disorder of sleep in which a person sits up and performs various motor actions, such as standing, walking about, talking, eating, screaming, dressing, going to the bathroom, or even leaving the house. The episode usually ends with the sleepwalker’s returning to sleep,

  • Sleepwalking Land (work by Couto)

    African literature: Portuguese: …Couto wrote Terra sonâmbula (1992; Sleepwalking Land); its publication was a major event in prose writing in Mozambique. Couto moves between reality and fantasy in his writing. In A varanda de frangipani (1996; Under the Frangipani), for instance, a man returns from the dead to become a spirit that moves…

  • Sleepy Hollow (film by Burton [1999])

    Tim Burton: …called the worst director ever; Sleepy Hollow (1999), which was based on Washington Irving’s story “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow”; and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005), an adaptation of Roald Dahl’s children’s book of the same name.

  • Sleepy Lagoon murder (criminal case)

    Zoot Suit Riots: Prelude to the riots: …are commonly associated with the Sleepy Lagoon murder, which occurred in August 1942. The Sleepy Lagoon, as it was nicknamed, was one of the larger reservoirs outside the city of Los Angeles. On the night of August 1, 1942, zoot-suiters were involved in a fight at a party near the…

  • sleepy lizard (reptile)

    lizard: Parental care: In Australia, juvenile sleepy lizards (Tiliqua rugosa) remain in their mother’s home range for an extended period, and this behaviour suggests that they gain a survival advantage by doing so. Female sleepy lizards and those of the Baudin Island spiny-tailed skink (Egernia stokesii aethiops) recognize their own offspring…

  • sleepy sickness (disease)

    encephalitis lethargica, form of encephalitis that emerged in the early 20th century. An encephalitis lethargica epidemic occurred from 1915 to 1928. The disease was first described medically in 1917, though numerous possible forerunners dating back to the 16th century have been identified.

  • sleet (meteorology)

    sleet, globular, generally transparent ice pellets that have diameters of 5 mm (0.2 inch) or less and that form as a result of the freezing of raindrops or the freezing of mostly melted snowflakes. Larger particles are called hailstones (see hail). Sleet may occur when a warm layer of air lies

  • sleeve dog (mammal)

    Pekingese: The celebrated “sleeve dogs” are very small Pekingese once carried by Chinese royalty in the sleeves of their robes.

  • sleigh

    sled, vehicle usually drawn by either horses or dogs over ice or snow in winter. Its predecessor, the sledge, in the form of the travois and the sidecar, is believed to have been the first vehicle used by humans. The body of a sled is supported on runners, or straight, narrow skids. Sleds are

  • Sleigh Ride (music by Anderson)

    Leroy Anderson: …arranger, and composer of “Sleigh Ride,” “Blue Tango,” and other popular light orchestral music with memorable, optimistic melodies and often unusual percussion effects.

  • sleight of hand (entertainment)

    magic, theatrical representation of the defiance of natural law. Legerdemain, meaning “light, or nimble, of hand,” and juggling, meaning “the performance of tricks,” were the terms initially used to designate exhibitions of deception. The words magic and conjuring had no theatrical significance

  • Sleipnir (Norse mythology)

    Sleipnir, in Norse mythology, the god Odin’s magical horse. See

  • Slembi, Sigurd (Norwegian pretender to throne)

    Harald IV: …a pretender to the throne, Sigurd Slembi, who also claimed to be a son of Magnus III Barefoot.

  • slender blind snake (reptile family)

    blind snake: …blind snakes) and leptotyphlopids (threadsnakes and wormsnakes) are slender, and species of both families are seldom more than 30 cm (12 inches) long from snout to vent and grow to a maximum of 40 cm (16 inches) in total length. The anomalepids are made up of 15 species belonging…

  • slender glass lizard (reptile)

    glass lizard: It closely resembles the slender glass lizard, O. attenuatus, which has a broader distribution in southeastern North America northwestward into the upper Mississippi River valley. Unlike O. ventralis, which has a broad band along each lower side, O. attenuatus has narrow dark lines.

  • slender gold (Chinese calligraphy)

    Huizong: …mannered style known as “slender gold.” Huizong sponsored the compilation of a major catalog of artists’ biographies and paintings from the 3rd century to his time, known as the Xuanhe huapu (“Catalog of Paintings of the Xuanhe Emperor”).

  • slender Indian grass (plant)

    Indian grass: …is a close relative of slender Indian grass (Sorghastrum elliottii) and lopsided Indian grass (S. secundum).

  • slender ladies’ tresses (plant)

    ladies’ tresses: Slender ladies’ tresses (S. lacera) of North America has a single spiral of small white flowers.

  • slender lobelia (plant)

    lobelia: Major species: Slender lobelia (L. tenuior), with blue flowers, is Australian and grown in the greenhouse. Southern lobelia (L. georgiana), from North America, as well as great blue lobelia (L. siphilitica) and its hybrids, also have blue flowers. Various lobelia hybrids constitute a fine group of fairly hardy and…

  • slender mola (fish)

    mola: However, the slender mola (Ranzania laevis) is smaller, measuring no more than 1 meter (39.3 inches) long. Some classifications also include the southern sunfish (M. ramsayi) is slightly smaller, measuring about 3 meters (9.9 feet), and is native to the southwestern Pacific Ocean.

  • slender pitcher plant (botany)

    pitcher plant: Nepenthaceae: …World genus Nepenthes include the slender pitcher plant (N. gracilis), the common swamp pitcher plant (N. mirabilis), and the golden peristome (N. veitchii), as well as a number of hybrid species such as Hooker’s pitcher plant N. ×hookeriana, N. ×mastersiana, and N. ×dominii.

  • slender riccia (plant)

    Riccia: …species, Riccia fluitans, sometimes called slender riccia, forms branching green ribbons about 0.1 centimetre (about 0.04 inch) wide and about 1.3 to 5 centimetres long that float in shallow ponds. The ribbons often become tangled in large masses. Other species of Riccia form rosettes on moist soils.

  • Slender Ships (poem by Margolin)

    Yiddish literature: Yiddish women writers: …by her short poem “Slender Ships,” which begins, “Slender ships drowse on the swollen green water, / black shadows sleep on the cold heart of the water.” Margolin portrays a natural scene that resonates with the poet’s psychology, concluding, “I shall be still.”

  • slender skink (reptile)

    skink: Slender skinks (Lygosoma and many other genera), snake-eyed skinks (Ablepharus and Cryptoblepharus), and skinks of the genus Plestiodon (formerly Eumeces) are also common. Slender skinks are found throughout the Old World tropics, with a few species in the New World. They have thick tails and…

  • slender suckerfish (fish)

    remora: The live sharksucker, or slender suckerfish (Echeneis naucrates), is the longest, growing up to 110 cm (43.3 inches) in length; the white suckerfish, or white remora (Remora albescens), is the shortest, the largest individuals measuring only 30 cm as adults. Remoras feed on the leavings of…

  • Slender Thread, The (film by Pollack [1965])

    Sydney Pollack: Film directing: …as a film director was The Slender Thread (1965), in which a crisis-line volunteer (played by Sidney Poitier) keeps a sleeping-pill-overdose victim (Anne Bancroft) talking on the phone as police try to trace the call and save her. That modest effort was followed by Pollack’s first prestige production, This Property…

  • slender wheatgrass (plant)

    wheatgrass: smithii), and slender wheatgrass (Elymus trachycaulus, formerly A. trachycaulum), all of which are useful forage plants.

  • slender-billed curlew (bird)

    slender-billed curlew, (Numenius tenuirostris), wide-ranging migratory shorebird once found in wetlands, grasslands, and intertidal areas on three continents. During the 20th century, the species inhabited Eurasia and Africa, likely migrating from breeding areas located in Central Asia to winter

  • slender-billed shearwater (bird)

    procellariiform: Importance to humans: …slender-billed, or short-tailed, shearwaters (Puffinus tenuirostris) are taken on the Bass Strait islands off Tasmania and sold fresh, salted, or deep-frozen as “muttonbirds.” In all likelihood, the name muttonbird was derived from the use of the flesh as a supplement for mutton by the early settlers of New South…

  • slender-billed vulture (bird)

    vulture: Old World vultures: indicus), and the slender-billed vulture (G. tenuirostris), have been brought close to extinction by feeding on the carcasses of dead cattle that had been given painkilling drugs; the painkillers cause kidney failure in the vultures.

  • slender-horned gazelle (mammal)

    gazelle: African gazelles: The rhim, or slender-horned, gazelle (G. leptoceros) is the most desert-adapted African gazelle and lives in the Sahara’s great sand deserts (ergs) from Algeria to Egypt. The third indigenous species, Speke’s gazelle (G. spekei), inhabits the coastal plain of Somalia.

  • slender-tailed meerkat (mammal)

    meerkat, (Suricata suricatta), burrowing member of the mongoose family (Herpestidae), found in southwestern Africa, that is unmistakably recognizable in its upright “sentinel” posture as it watches for predators. The meerkat is slender and has a pointed little face, tiny ears, and black eye

  • slender-tailed mierkat (mammal)

    meerkat, (Suricata suricatta), burrowing member of the mongoose family (Herpestidae), found in southwestern Africa, that is unmistakably recognizable in its upright “sentinel” posture as it watches for predators. The meerkat is slender and has a pointed little face, tiny ears, and black eye

  • slendro (music)

    slendro, Javanese and Balinese five-toned musical scale system. See

  • Slepian, Joseph (American electrical engineer and mathematician)

    Joseph Slepian was an American electrical engineer and mathematician credited with important developments in electrical apparatus and theory. Slepian studied at Harvard University, earning the Ph.D. in 1913. After a postdoctoral year in Europe he taught mathematics at Cornell University, Ithaca,

  • slepton (subatomic particle)

    subatomic particle: Testing supersymmetry: … 2 have supersymmetric partners, dubbed sleptons and squarks, with integer spin; and the photon, W, Z, gluon, and graviton have counterparts with half-integer spins, known as the photino, wino, zino, gluino, and gravitino, respectively. If they indeed exist, all these new supersymmetric particles must be heavy to have escaped

  • Slessor, Kenneth (Australian poet)

    Kenneth Slessor was an Australian poet and journalist best known for his poems “Beach Burial,” a moving tribute to Australian troops who fought in World War II, and “Five Bells,” his most important poem, a meditation on art, time, and death. Slessor became a reporter for the Sydney Sun at the age

  • Slessor, Sir John Cotesworth (British military officer)

    Sir John Cotesworth Slessor was a British marshal of the Royal Air Force (RAF) who was one of the architects of British air strategy during and after World War II. A childhood victim of polio, Slessor was at first rejected for military service in World War I but managed to gain entry to the Royal

  • Slesvig (medieval trade center, Denmark)

    Hedeby, in medieval Danish history, trade centre at the southeastern base of the Jutland Peninsula on the Schlei estuary. It served as an early focus of national unification and as a crossroads for Western–Eastern European and European–Western Asian trade. One of the earliest Scandinavian urban

  • Slesvig (historical region and duchy, Europe)

    Schleswig, historic and cultural region occupying the southern part of the Jutland Peninsula north of the Eider River. It encompasses the northern half of Schleswig-Holstein Land (state) in northern Germany and Sønderjylland region in southern Denmark. Schleswig became a Danish duchy in the 12th

  • Sleuth (film by Mankiewicz [1972])

    Joseph L. Mankiewicz: Later films: …the critically acclaimed feature film Sleuth (1972). Playwright Anthony Shaffer adapted his clever murder mystery, and Michael Caine and Laurence Olivier gave Oscar-nominated performances. In addition, Mankiewicz received his fourth nod for best direction. He subsequently retired. Mankiewicz was the recipient of countless industry awards, including the Directors Guild of…

  • Sleuth (film by Branagh [2007])

    Kenneth Branagh: …direct, and his credits included Sleuth (2007), a remake of the 1972 film about a mystery author who gets revenge on his wife’s younger lover, and Thor (2011), an adaptation of a comic book about the eponymous Norse god. In 2014 he helmed the action thriller Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit,…

  • Slezak, Leo (Austrian singer)

    Leo Slezak was an Austrian opera singer and film comedian, known for his performances of Wagnerian operatic roles. Slezak made his debut at Brno (now in Czech Republic) in Lohengrin in 1896. By 1909 he had established his reputation in London and New York City as a heroic tenor in the part of

  • Slezak, Walter (American actor)

    Leo Slezak: His son, Walter Slezak (1902–83), a well-known American actor, wrote an autobiography, What Time’s the Next Swan? (1962). The title refers to his father’s famous ad-lib in Richard Wagner’s Lohengrin, when the boat drawn by a swan moved offstage without him.

  • Slezanie (people)

    Silesia: …in the north and the Ślęzanie (from whom it got its name), the Opolanie, and the Golensicowie in the south. In the 10th century the Czech dynasty of the Přemyslids and the Polish dynasty of the Piasts contested the territory. Mieszko I, prince of Poland, was able to acquire the…

  • Slezské písně (work by Bezruc)

    Petr Bezruč: …last edition of the collected Slezské písně (1956; “Silesian Songs”).

  • Slezsko (historical region, Europe)

    Silesia, historical region that is now in southwestern Poland. Silesia was originally a Polish province, which became a possession of the Bohemian crown in 1335, passed with that crown to the Austrian Habsburgs in 1526, and was taken by Prussia in 1742. In 1945, at the end of World War II, Silesia

  • SLFP (political party, Sri Lanka)

    Sinhala Maha Sabha: …establishing in its place the Sri Lanka Freedom Party, which in 1956 defeated the UNP and thrust Bandaranaike into the prime ministership.

  • SLI battery

    battery: Lead-acid batteries: …classified into three groups: (1) starting-lighting-ignition (SLI) batteries, (2) traction batteries, and (3) stationary batteries. The automotive SLI battery is the best-known portable rechargeable power source. High current can be obtained for hundreds of shallow-depth discharges over a period of several years. Traction batteries are employed in industrial lift trucks,…

  • Sliabh Speirín (mountains, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom)

    Sperrin Mountains, mountain range disposed along an arc about 20 miles (32 km) southeast of Londonderry city, Northern Ireland. The highest peaks—Sawel, Mullaclogher, and Mullaghaneany—all exceed 2,000 feet (608 m) and are capped with crystalline limestone. The Sperrins were extensively glaciated

  • slicing (technology)

    baking: Slicing: Bread often is marketed in sliced form. Slicing is performed by parallel arrays of saw blades through which the loaves are carried by gravity or by conveyors. The blades may be endless bands carried on rotating drums, or relatively short strips held in a…

  • Slicing the market pie: How stock splits work and why they matter

    If you’re just learning about stock splits, you may have heard some variation of the pizza analogy. It goes like this: A stock split is like cutting a pizza. Whether you cut it into four or eight slices (or you square-cut it into 24 slices), it’s still the same pizza. That’s a stock split. A

  • slick (pollution)

    slick, glassy patch or streak on a relatively undisturbed ocean or lake surface, formed where surface tension is reduced by a monomolecular layer of organic matter produced by plankton or by man; closer to shore most of the material is man-made hydrocarbon pollutant. Slicks are patchy when the wind

  • Slick, Grace (American singer and songwriter)

    Grace Slick is an American musician and artist best known as the colead vocalist of the classic rock band Jefferson Airplane and its spinoff bands, Jefferson Starship and Starship. Slick’s striking beauty, stage presence, and dynamic contralto voice enabled Jefferson Airplane to become one of the