- stainless steel (metallurgy)
stainless steel, any one of a family of alloy steels usually containing 10 to 30 percent chromium. In conjunction with low carbon content, chromium imparts remarkable resistance to corrosion and heat. Other elements, such as nickel, molybdenum, titanium, aluminum, niobium, copper, nitrogen, sulfur,
- Stainov, Petko (Bulgarian composer)
Bulgaria: The arts of Bulgaria: …such composers as Lyubomir Pipkov, Petko Stainov, and Pancho Vladigerov. Bulgarian composers in the second half of the 20th century experimented with new tonality in vocal and instrumental music. Recordings and concert tours abroad won much wider audiences for traditional Bulgarian vocal music.
- Stainville, comte de (French foreign minister)
Étienne-François de Choiseul, duke de Choiseul was a French foreign minister who dominated the government of King Louis XV from 1758 to 1770. Choiseul, the son of François-Joseph de Choiseul, Marquis de Stainville, adopted the title Count de Stainville, entered the French army, and served with
- stair (architecture)
staircase, series, or flight, of steps between two floors. Traditionally, staircase is a term for stairs accompanied by walls, but contemporary usage includes the stairs alone. The origin of the staircase is uncertain. On the road up Mount Tai in China there are many great flights of ancient
- stair-step moss (plant species)
stair-step moss, (Hylocomium splendens), moss in the subclass Bryidae that covers areas of coniferous forest floor of the Northern Hemisphere and also occurs on dunes, ledges, and tundra. The fernlike shoots have many branches and reddish, glossy caulids (stems) with phyllids (leaves) up to 3 mm
- staircase (architecture)
staircase, series, or flight, of steps between two floors. Traditionally, staircase is a term for stairs accompanied by walls, but contemporary usage includes the stairs alone. The origin of the staircase is uncertain. On the road up Mount Tai in China there are many great flights of ancient
- Staircase (film by Donen [1969])
Stanley Donen: Films of the 1960s and ’70s: … as a gay couple in Staircase (1969). In 1974 Donen made an inauspicious return to the world of musicals with The Little Prince.
- Staircase (work by Demand)
Thomas Demand: Staircase (1995) represents the artist’s memory of the stairwell in his childhood school. Barn (1997), one of a number of works evoking artists’ workshops, was inspired by a photo of the studio of American painter Jackson Pollock. The most prominent of Demand’s works are those…
- staircase shell (gastropod family)
wentletrap, any marine snail of the family Epitoniidae (subclass Prosobranchia of the class Gastropoda), in which the turreted shell—consisting of whorls that form a high, conical spiral—has deeply ribbed sculpturing. Most species are white, less than 5 cm (2 inches) long, and exude a pink or
- Staircase, The (American television miniseries)
Toni Collette: …starred with Colin Firth in The Staircase, a true-crime miniseries about the death of a writer’s wife.
- stairs (architecture)
staircase, series, or flight, of steps between two floors. Traditionally, staircase is a term for stairs accompanied by walls, but contemporary usage includes the stairs alone. The origin of the staircase is uncertain. On the road up Mount Tai in China there are many great flights of ancient
- stairway (architecture)
staircase, series, or flight, of steps between two floors. Traditionally, staircase is a term for stairs accompanied by walls, but contemporary usage includes the stairs alone. The origin of the staircase is uncertain. On the road up Mount Tai in China there are many great flights of ancient
- Stairway to Heaven (song by Page and Plant)
Heart: Career: …rendition of Led Zeppelin’s “Stairway to Heaven” at the Kennedy Center Opera House when Led Zeppelin bandmates Robert Plant, Jimmy Page, and John Paul Jones received Kennedy Center Honors from U.S. Pres. Barack Obama. In 2013 Heart was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. Heart’s legacy…
- stake (religious organization)
Community of Christ: …of area organizations, districts and stakes. The district organization ties the individual congregations of an area into a fellowship presided over by officers elected at district conferences. The stake organization consists of a number of congregations administered by a central authority, the stake presidency, stake bishopric, and stake high council.…
- stake driver (bird)
bittern: The American bittern (B. lentiginosus), known locally as “stake driver” or “thunder pumper,” is slightly smaller. Other forms are the Australian bittern (B. poiciloptilus) and the South American, or pinnated, bittern (B. pinnatus).
- Staked Plains (region, United States)
Llano Estacado, portion of the High Plains of the United States, along the Texas–New Mexico border. It covers an area of about 30,000 square miles (78,000 square km) and is bounded by the Canadian River valley (north), the “break of the plains” (east), the Edwards Plateau (south), and the Mescalero
- stakeholder (organizational element)
stakeholder, any individual, social group, or actor who possesses an interest, a legal obligation, a moral right, or other concern in the decisions or outcomes of an organization, typically a business firm, corporation, or government. Stakeholders either affect or are affected by the achievement of
- Stakeout (film by Badham [1987])
Richard Dreyfuss: 1980s: …films as the comedy adventure Stakeout (1987) and the psychological drama Nuts (1987), in which he costarred with Barbra Streisand. One of Dreyfuss’s best films from this period was director Barry Levinson’s Tin Men (1987), a comedy both darkly satiric and nostalgically bittersweet, in which Dreyfuss and Danny DeVito
- Stakhanov (Ukraine)
Stakhanov, city, eastern Ukraine. It is situated in the northern part of the Donets Basin. The city developed in the 19th century as a coal-mining settlement. From 1935 to 1943, it was known as Sergo. Stakhanov was one of the major coal-mining towns of the Donets Basin, though it declined in
- Stakhanov, Aleksey Grigoriyevich (Soviet miner)
Stakhanov: …was renamed in 1978 for Aleksey Stakhanov, the legendary Soviet model coal miner whose use of innovative working methods to greatly increase his personal productivity became the basis for the Stakhanovite movement in the Soviet Union. Pop. (2001) 90,152; (2005 est.) 84,427.
- Stakhanovite (elite worker)
Soviet Union: Industrialization, 1929–34: …culminated in the much publicized Stakhanovite movement. It was announced that Aleksey Stakhanov, a miner, had devised a method for immensely increasing productivity. The method as stated was no more than a rationalization (in the Taylorian or Fordian sense) of the arrangements for clearing debris, keeping machines ready, and so…
- Stakhr (ancient city, Iran)
Persepolis: History of Persepolis: …ce the nearby city of Istakhr (Estakhr, Stakhr) was the seat of local government, and Istakhr acquired importance as a centre of priestly wisdom and orthodoxy. Thereafter the city became the centre of the Persian Sasanian dynasty, though the stone ruins that still stand just west of Persepolis suggest that…
- staking game
card game: Classification: Assorted Referencesplaying cardsuse of the term “honour”
- Stakman, Elvin Charles (American plant pathologist)
Elvin Charles Stakman was a pioneering American plant pathologist and educator who established the methods for identifying and combatting diseases of wheat and other important food crops. Stakman received his B.A. (1906), M.A. (1910), and Ph.D. (1913) from the University of Minnesota. In 1909 he
- stalactite and stalagmite (mineral formation)
stalactite and stalagmite, elongated forms of various minerals deposited from solution by slowly dripping water. A stalactite hangs like an icicle from the ceiling or sides of a cavern. A stalagmite appears like an inverted stalactite, rising from the floor of a cavern. Stalactites hanging from the
- stalactite work (architecture)
stalactite work, pendentive form of architectural ornamentation, resembling the geological formations called stalactites. This type of ornamentation is characteristic of Islamic architecture and decoration. It consists of a series of little niches, bracketed out one above the other, or of
- stalactitic texture (mineralogy)
mineral: Crystal habit and crystal aggregation: …botryoidal, reniform, and mammillary forms); stalactitic, pendant cylinders or cones resembling icicles; concentric, roughly spherical layers arranged about a common centre, as in agate and in geodes; geode, a partially filled rock cavity lined by mineral material (geodes may be banded as in agate owing to successive depositions of material,…
- Stalag 17 (film by Wilder [1953])
Stalag 17, American war film, released in 1953, that was directed by Billy Wilder and featured an Academy Award-winning performance by William Holden. The film is set in a German prisoner-of-war camp, Stalag 17, during World War II. It tracks the daily boredom and nighttime escape attempts of the
- stalagmite (mineral formation)
stalactite and stalagmite: stalagmite, elongated forms of various minerals deposited from solution by slowly dripping water. A stalactite hangs like an icicle from the ceiling or sides of a cavern. A stalagmite appears like an inverted stalactite, rising from the floor of a cavern.
- Stalden (Switzerland)
Switzerland: Dry areas: …163 inches (4,140 mm), while Stalden in the entrenched Vispa valley, 4 miles (6 km) south of the main Rhône valley, has the lowest, 21 inches (533 mm).
- stalemate (chess)
chess: Object of the game: …has no legal move (stalemate), (5) when an identical position occurs three times with the same player having the right to move, and (6) when no piece has been captured and no pawn has been moved within a period of 50 moves.
- Staley, Dawn (American basketball coach and former player)
Dawn Staley is an American basketball coach who has led the University of South Carolina women’s team since 2008. Under Staley, the team has won three national championship titles (2017, 2022, and 2024). Before her coaching career, Staley was an outstanding point guard and a five-time All-Star in
- Staley, Dawn Michelle (American basketball coach and former player)
Dawn Staley is an American basketball coach who has led the University of South Carolina women’s team since 2008. Under Staley, the team has won three national championship titles (2017, 2022, and 2024). Before her coaching career, Staley was an outstanding point guard and a five-time All-Star in
- Staley, Joan (American actress)
The Ghost and Mr. Chicken: Cast:
- Stalin (Bulgaria)
Varna, seaport and third largest city in Bulgaria. Lying on the north shore of Varna Bay on the Black Sea coast, the city is sheltered by the Dobrudzhansko plateau, which rises to more than 1,000 feet (300 metres) above sea level. A narrow canal (1907) links Varna Lake—a drowned valley into which
- Stalin (Soviet tank)
tank: World War II: …the Russians brought out the JS, or Stalin, heavy tank, which appeared in 1944 armed with a 122-mm gun. Its muzzle velocity was lower than that of the German 88-mm guns, however, and it weighed only 46 tons. At about the same time the T-34 was rearmed with an 85-mm…
- Stalin Constitution (Soviet history)
constitution: Constitutional change: The Stalin constitution continued, together with the Rules of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, to serve as the formal framework of government until the ratification of a new, though rather similar, constitution in 1977. The procedures established by these documents, however, were not able…
- Stalin Line (fortification)
fortification: Other fort series: …statesman); the Soviets built the Stalin Line facing Poland; the Czechoslovaks constructed what became known as the Little Maginot Line to oppose Germany; the Greeks built the Metaxas Line facing Bulgaria; and the Belgians erected a series of elaborate forts along the Albert Canal. German capture of the most elaborate…
- Stalin Peak (mountain, Slovakia)
Gerlach Peak, highest peak (8,711 feet [2,655 metres]) of the Carpathian Mountains and of Slovakia. It is in the High Tatra range near the Polish
- Stalin Peak (mountain, Tajikistan)
Imeni Ismail Samani Peak, peak, western Pamirs, northeastern Tajikistan. Located in the Akademii Nauk Range, it rises to 24,590 feet (7,495 metres) and is the highest point in Tajikistan and in the range. It was first climbed by a Russian team in
- Stalin Peak (mountain, Bulgaria)
Rila: …9,596 feet (2,925 metres) at Musala peak and contains the headstreams of the Iskŭr, Maritsa, and Mesta rivers. Scattered mineral deposits include lead, copper, zinc, magnetite, oil shale, and marble (near Pernik).
- Stalin, Iosif Vissarionovich (premier of Soviet Union)
Joseph Stalin was the secretary-general of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (1922–53) and premier of the Soviet state (1941–53), who for a quarter of a century dictatorially ruled the Soviet Union and transformed it into a major world power. During the quarter of a century preceding his
- Stalin, Joseph (premier of Soviet Union)
Joseph Stalin was the secretary-general of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (1922–53) and premier of the Soviet state (1941–53), who for a quarter of a century dictatorially ruled the Soviet Union and transformed it into a major world power. During the quarter of a century preceding his
- Stalin, M.K. (Indian politician)
M.K. Stalin is an Indian politician and leader of the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (Dravidian Progressive Federation; DMK) party in the southeastern Indian state of Tamil Nadu. He has served as a member of the Tamil Nadu legislature (1989–91, 1996– ), mayor of Tamil Nadu’s capital Chennai (1996–2002),
- Stalin, Muthuvel Karunanidhi (Indian politician)
M.K. Stalin is an Indian politician and leader of the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (Dravidian Progressive Federation; DMK) party in the southeastern Indian state of Tamil Nadu. He has served as a member of the Tamil Nadu legislature (1989–91, 1996– ), mayor of Tamil Nadu’s capital Chennai (1996–2002),
- Stalin, Oraşul (Romania)
Brașov, city, capital of Brașov județ (county), central Romania. One of the largest cities of the country, it is on the northern slope of the Transylvanian Alps (Southern Carpathians), surrounded on three sides by mountains, 105 miles (170 km) north-northwest of Bucharest by road. Founded by
- Stalina, Svetlana Iosifovna (Russian writer)
Svetlana Alliluyeva was the Russian-born daughter of Soviet ruler Joseph Stalin; her defection to the United States in 1967 caused an international sensation. She was Stalin’s only daughter and a product of his second marriage with Nadezhda Alliluyeva, who committed suicide in 1932. Svetlana
- Stalinabad (national capital, Tajikistan)
Dushanbe, city and capital of Tajikistan. It lies along the Varzob (Dushanbinka) River in the Gissar valley, in the southwest of the republic. It was built in the Soviet period on the site of three former settlements, of which the largest was named Dyushambe (Tajik dush, meaning “Monday,” its
- Staline (work by Barbusse)
Henri Barbusse: His last work, Staline (1935; Eng. trans., 1935), was partly written in the Soviet Union, where he was living at the time of his death.
- staling (foodstuffs)
baking: Staling: Undesirable changes in bakery products can occur independently of microbial action. Staling involves changes in texture, flavour, and appearance. Firming of the interior, or “crumb,” is a highly noticeable alteration in bread and other low-density, lean products. Elasticity is lost, and the structure becomes…
- Stalingrad (work by Plievier)
Theodor Plievier: The first volume, Stalingrad (1945), which describes the crushing defeat of the German Sixth Army, became an international best seller. The trilogy was completed by Moskau (1952; Moscow) and Berlin (1954).
- Stalingrad (oblast, Russia)
Volgograd, oblast (region), southwestern Russia, lying athwart the lower Volga and Don rivers. The Volga is flanked on the west by the Volga Upland, which is continued south of Volgograd as the Yergeni Upland. West of the Khoper and Don are additional low uplands. Between the uplands and also east
- Stalingrad (Russia)
Volgograd, city and administrative centre of Volgograd oblast (region), southwestern Russia, on the Volga River. It was founded as the fortress of Tsaritsyn in 1589 to protect newly acquired Russian territory along the Volga. During the Russian Civil War (1918–20), Joseph Stalin organized the
- Stalingrad, Battle of (World War II [1942–1943])
Battle of Stalingrad, (July 17, 1942–February 2, 1943), successful Soviet defense of the city of Stalingrad (now Volgograd), Russia, U.S.S.R., during World War II. Russians consider it to be one of the greatest battles of their Great Patriotic War, and most historians consider it to be the greatest
- Staliniri (Georgia)
Tskhinvali, city, north-central Georgia, on the Bolshaya Liakhvi River. It is the leading city of an area populated by a Caucasian people known as Ossetes, or Ossetians. Tskhinvali is the capital of the breakaway region of South Ossetia. In the late 1980s Tskhinvali became the centre of a
- Stalinism (political doctrine)
Stalinism, the method of rule, or policies, of Joseph Stalin, Soviet Communist Party and state leader from 1929 until his death in 1953. Stalinism is associated with a regime of terror and totalitarian rule. In a party dominated by intellectuals and rhetoricians, Stalin stood for a practical
- Stalino (Ukraine)
Donetsk, city, southeastern Ukraine, on the headwaters of the Kalmius River. It is the capital of Donetsk oblast (province) and the most prominent city in the Donets Basin (Donbas) industrial region. In 1872 an ironworks was founded there by a Welshman, John Hughes (from whom the town’s
- Stalinogorsk (Russia)
Novomoskovsk, city, Tula oblast (region), western Russia, situated on the upper Don River. Founded in 1930 as Bobriki, the town developed as a major chemical centre, making fertilizers and plastics and mining lignite (brown coal). Pop. (2006 est.)
- Stalinsk (Russia)
Novokuznetsk, city, Kemerovo oblast (region), south-central Russia. The city lies along the Tom River just below its confluence with the Kondoma, in the Kuznetsk Coal Basin. Originally the small village of Kuznetsk, founded in 1617, stood on the river’s right bank; it had about 4,000 inhabitants in
- stalk-eyed fly (insect)
stalk-eyed fly, (family Diopsidae), any member of a family of unusual-looking flies (order Diptera) that have their eyes mounted on long stalks near the antennae. This arrangement, although advantageous to vision, is an aerodynamic handicap. The adults of the one species in North America
- stalked barnacle (crustacean)
cirripede: Diversity and distribution: Pedunculate barnacles are similar to the sessile barnacles in having the principal part of the body contained within a protective covering, or wall. They differ from acorn barnacles in that the plates do not form a separate wall and operculum and in having the wall…
- stalked thallus
fungus: Basic features of lichens: Fruticose (stalked) thalli and filamentous forms prefer to utilize water in vapour form and are prevalent in humid, foggy areas such as seacoasts and mountainous regions of the tropics.
- Stalker, John (English writer)
lacquerwork: Europe: John Stalker and George Parker’s Treatise of Japanning and Varnishing (London, 1688) was the first text with pattern illustrations. The English term japanning was inspired by the superiority of Japanese lacquer, which Stalker found “…in fineness of Black, and neatness of draught…more beautiful, more rich,…
- stalking (sport)
hunting: Hunting methods: …hunter, a slow stealthy approach, stalking, is necessary, taking advantage of even small cover and being careful that the wind does not blow the scent of the hunter to the prey.
- stalking (crime)
stalking, the crime of following another person against his or her wishes and harassing that person. The status of stalking as a criminal offense is relatively new, having emerged in the early 1990s, although the behaviours that characterize stalking are not. What is today called stalking was
- Stalking Moon, The (film by Mulligan [1968])
The Stalking Moon, American western film, released in 1968, that was an inventive and highly unusual entry in the genre, noted for its avoidance of shoot-outs in favour of suspense. Sam Varner (played by Gregory Peck) is a freelance scout in the employ of the U.S. Cavalry. His last mission prior to
- Stalkler, Angela Olive (British author)
Angela Carter was a British author who reshaped motifs from mythology, legends, and fairy tales in her books, lending them a ghastly humour and eroticism. Carter rejected an Oxford education to work as a journalist with the Croydon Advertiser, but she later studied medieval literature at the
- Stalky & Co. (work by Kipling)
Rudyard Kipling: Life: …the glorious place celebrated in Stalky & Co. (1899) and related stories: an unruly paradise in which the highest goals of English education are met amid a tumult of teasing, bullying, and beating. The Stalky saga is one of Kipling’s great imaginative achievements. Readers repelled by a strain of brutality—even…
- stall (aerodynamics)
airplane: Engine placement: …delay the onset of the stall. Some aircraft also have forward wings, which provide lift and delay the stall, but these are not control surfaces and hence not canards.)
- stall (church architecture)
choir: …seats had developed into choir stalls, built-in rows of prayer rests and hinged seats, which, when folded, often revealed misericords—projections used for support during long periods of standing.
- stall ballad (narrative song)
broadside ballad, a descriptive or narrative verse or song, commonly in a simple ballad form, on a popular theme, and sung or recited in public places or printed on broadsides for sale in the streets. Broadside ballads appeared shortly after the invention of printing in the 15th century and were
- stall barn (agriculture)
farm building: Livestock barns and shelters: …two major cattle-housing methods, the stall barn (or stanchion barn) and the loose-housing system. In the stall barn each animal is tied up in a stall for resting, feeding, milking, and watering. The typical plan has two rows of stalls. In older buildings hay and straw are stored in an…
- Staller, Ilona (Italian actress)
Jeff Koons: …former wife, Italian porn star Cicciolina (Ilona Staller). Koons was an early pioneer of appropriation, which called for reproducing banal commercial images and objects with only slight modifications in scale or material. By the 21st century he was best known for his fabricated objects from commercial sources—primarily inflatable pool toys…
- Stalling, Carl (American composer and arranger)
Disney Company: Early years and Mickey Mouse: …or to the music of Carl Stalling, the musician who scored many of the best Disney and Warner Brothers cartoons. The Silly Symphonies entry Flowers and Trees (1932) was the first cartoon produced in the three-colour Technicolor process, as well as the first animated short subject to be honoured with…
- stallion (horse)
livestock farming: Management: …is sired by an expensive stallion out of a valuable mare.
- Stallman, Richard (American computer programmer)
Richard Stallman is an American computer programmer and free-software advocate who founded (1985) the Free Software Foundation. Stallman earned a bachelor’s degree in physics from Harvard University in 1974. In 1971, as a freshman at Harvard, he had begun working at the Artificial Intelligence
- Stallman, Richard Matthew (American computer programmer)
Richard Stallman is an American computer programmer and free-software advocate who founded (1985) the Free Software Foundation. Stallman earned a bachelor’s degree in physics from Harvard University in 1974. In 1971, as a freshman at Harvard, he had begun working at the Artificial Intelligence
- Stallo, Johann Bernard (German-American scholar)
Johann Bernard Stallo was a German-American scientist, philosopher, educator, and lawyer who influenced philosophic study by criticizing contemporary scientific findings interpreted from linguistic theories of nature. Although initially he advocated Hegelian ontology as evidenced in General
- Stallo, John Bernard (German-American scholar)
Johann Bernard Stallo was a German-American scientist, philosopher, educator, and lawyer who influenced philosophic study by criticizing contemporary scientific findings interpreted from linguistic theories of nature. Although initially he advocated Hegelian ontology as evidenced in General
- Stallone, Sylvester (American actor, screenwriter, director, and producer)
Sylvester Stallone is an American actor, screenwriter, and director who rocketed to fame playing underdog boxer Rocky Balboa in the film Rocky (1976) and its sequels. Known for his distinctive slurred speaking style and muscular physique, Stallone cemented his status as an icon of the action genre
- Stallone, Sylvester Gardenzio (American actor, screenwriter, director, and producer)
Sylvester Stallone is an American actor, screenwriter, and director who rocketed to fame playing underdog boxer Rocky Balboa in the film Rocky (1976) and its sequels. Known for his distinctive slurred speaking style and muscular physique, Stallone cemented his status as an icon of the action genre
- Stalnaker, Robert (American philosopher)
realism: Possible worlds: …propounded by the American philosopher Robert Stalnaker which denies Lewis’s homogeneity thesis (the claim that merely possible worlds are entities of the same kind as the actual world), as well as fictionalism, the view that possible-world theory is literally false but useful.
- Stalwart (American political faction)
Stalwart, in U.S. history, member of a faction of the Republican Party that opposed the civil-service reform policies of President Rutherford B. Hayes and sought unsuccessfully a third presidential term for Ulysses S. Grant. The Stalwarts, or regular Republicans, vied with the generally more
- Stam, Mart (Dutch architect)
Ilse Bing: Bing met Bauhaus architect Mart Stam about 1929–30. Stam commissioned her to document all of his projects, interiors and exteriors, throughout Frankfurt. He was also an important link to the avant-garde circles in Frankfurt, and he introduced Bing to artists such as El Lissitzky, Kurt Schwitters, Hannah Höch, and…
- Stambolić, Ivan (Serbian political leader)
Slobodan Milošević: …1984 as a protégé of Ivan Stambolić, head of the League of Communists of Serbia (LCS). Milošević took over as head of the local communist party organization in Belgrade that year.
- Stamboliyski, Aleksandŭr (Bulgarian political leader)
Aleksandŭr Stamboliyski was the leader of the Agrarian Party in Bulgaria, supporter of the Allied cause during World War I in opposition to his pro-German king Ferdinand, and prime minister of a reformist government after the war (1919–23). After attending an agricultural college in Germany,
- Stambolov, Stefan Nikolov (prime minister of Bulgaria)
Stefan Nikolov Stambolov was a statesman who from 1887 to 1894 served as the despotic prime minister of Bulgaria; he was often referred to as the Bulgarian Bismarck. The son of an innkeeper, Stambolov early joined the Bulgarian underground revolutionary movement against Turkish rule and led small
- Stamboul (district, Istanbul, Turkey)
Istanbul: City site: …Horn separates old Istanbul (Stamboul) to the south from the “new” city of Beyoğlu to the north; the broader Bosporus divides European Istanbul from the city’s districts on the Asian shore—Üsküdar (ancient Chrysopolis) and Kadıköy (ancient Chalcedon).
- Stamboul Train (novel by Greene)
Graham Greene: First novels and entertainments: …his own with a thriller, Stamboul Train (1932; also published as Orient Express), which plays off various characters against each other as they ride a train from the English Channel to Istanbul. This was the first of a string of novels that he termed “entertainments,” works similar to thrillers in…
- stamen (plant anatomy)
stamen, the male reproductive part of a flower. In all but a few extant angiosperms, the stamen consists of a long slender stalk, the filament, with a two-lobed anther at the tip. The anther consists of four saclike structures (microsporangia) that produce pollen for pollination. Small secretory
- Stamford (Connecticut, United States)
Stamford, city, coextensive with the town (township) of Stamford, Fairfield county, southwestern Connecticut, U.S. It lies at the mouth of the Rippowam River on Long Island Sound and is 36 miles (58 km) northeast of New York City. The town was founded in 1641 by 28 pioneers from Wethersfield (near
- Stamford (England, United Kingdom)
Stamford, town (parish), South Kesteven district, administrative and historic county of Lincolnshire, east-central England, on the River Welland. It is an ancient market town incorporated in 1462. Built of local limestone, it preserves much of its traditional character and architectural distinction
- Stamford Bridge (England, United Kingdom)
Battle of Stamford Bridge: …into his army, at nearby Stamford Bridge on the River Derwent. The two armies drew up the next day, and Harold offered his brother peace while adding that Harald would be rewarded only with a grave. An English offensive was soon reversed by a Viking counteroffensive led by Harald that…
- Stamford Bridge, Battle of (European history [1066])
Battle of Stamford Bridge, battle fought between Saxon and Viking forces on September 25, 1066, about 7 miles east of York, England, with the Britons emerging victorious. Were it not totally overshadowed by a more famous confrontation that took place at Hastings three weeks later, the Battle of
- staminate flower (plant anatomy)
flower: Form and types: …(unisexual) flower that lacks stamens Staminate, or male: an imperfect (unisexual) flower that lacks pistils Monoecious: a species in which an individual plant that bears both pistillate and staminate flowers (e.g., tuberous begonia, hazel, oak, corn) Dioecious: a species in which an individual plant that bears only pistillate or staminate…
- staminode (plant anatomy)
angiosperm: The androecium: …a petal-like blade called a staminode (in the same manner that a sepal forms a petal-like blade in some flowers without true petals). The apparent petals in some angiosperm families, such as are found in many members of the pink family (Caryophyllaceae), are staminodial in origin. Wild roses have only…
- Stamitz, Carl (German composer)
Carl Stamitz was a German composer of the last generation of Mannheim symphonists. Stamitz was the son of Johann Stamitz, the founder of the Mannheim school. He played violin in the court orchestra at Mannheim in 1762 and was also a viola and viola d’amore player there, before leaving for Paris in
- Stamitz, Jan Waczlaw Antonín (Bohemian composer)
Johann Stamitz was a Bohemian composer who founded the Mannheim school of symphonists, which had an immense influence on Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Stamitz received early musical education from his father and appeared as a violinist in Frankfurt am Main in 1742. He had apparently by then been engaged
- Stamitz, Johann (Bohemian composer)
Johann Stamitz was a Bohemian composer who founded the Mannheim school of symphonists, which had an immense influence on Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Stamitz received early musical education from his father and appeared as a violinist in Frankfurt am Main in 1742. He had apparently by then been engaged
- Stamkos, Steven (Canadian ice hockey player)
Tampa Bay Lightning: …Lightning team led by centre Steven Stamkos survived two seven-game series and one six-game series during the Eastern Conference playoffs to advance to the Stanley Cup finals, where the team played another close series before eventually losing to the Chicago Blackhawks. The Lightning made another deep playoff run in 2015–16…