• This Storm (novel by Ellroy)

    James Ellroy: The story continues in This Storm (2019), the second installment in the series.

  • This Sunday (work by Donoso)

    José Donoso: …third novels, Este domingo (1966; This Sunday) and El lugar sin límites (1966; “The Place Without Limits”; Hell Has No Limits), depict characters barely able to subsist in an atmosphere of desolation and anguish. El obsceno pajaro de la noche (1970; The Obscene Bird of Night), regarded as his masterpiece,…

  • This Thing Called Love (film by Hall [1940])

    Alexander Hall: The Columbia years: Arguably better was This Thing Called Love (1940), with Rosalind Russell and Douglas as a recently married couple who struggle after she insists on three months of celibacy.

  • This Tree Will Be Here for a Thousand Years (poetry by Bly)

    Robert Bly: …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 themes of male grief and the father-son connection that he developed further in…

  • This Way for the Gas, Ladies and Gentlemen, and Other Stories (short stories by Borowski)

    Tadeusz Borowski: …appear in the English translation This Way for the Gas, Ladies and Gentlemen, and Other Stories [1967].)

  • This Week (American news program)

    Christiane Amanpour: …of ABC’s political affairs show This Week later that year. She stepped down from the program, however, in December 2011. In a special arrangement, she then resumed her role at CNN while continuing at ABC as its global affairs anchor. Amanpour returned in 2012 on the CNN International channel, and…

  • This Week with David Brinkley (American news program)

    David Brinkley: …Broadcasting Company (ABC) to host This Week with David Brinkley, a Sunday program featuring Brinkley and a panel of other journalists that conducted interviews and provided analysis of the week’s events from various political perspectives. Brinkley hosted the show until 1996 but played a continuing role as a weekly commentator…

  • This Year It Will Be Different and Other Stories: A Christmas Treasury (short stories by Binchy)

    Maeve Binchy: … (1984; television movie 1990), and This Year It Will Be Different, and Other Stories: A Christmas Treasury (1996). The collections Chestnut Street (2014) and A Few of the Girls (2016) were published posthumously. She authored several plays for the stage and for television.

  • This Year’s Model (album by Costello)

    Elvis Costello: Forming the Attractions: …early albums with the Attractions—This Year’s Model (1978), Armed Forces (1979), and Get Happy!! (1980)—Costello and Lowe developed a distinctive guitar and keyboard mix that was influenced by a variety of 1960s artists, including Booker T. and the MG’s. The most notable work of this early period—rockers such as…

  • This, Hervé (French chemist)

    molecular gastronomy: …gastronomy—was established in 1988 by Hervé This, a physical chemist, and Nicholas Kurti, a former professor of physics at the University of Oxford, who were interested in the science behind the phenomena that occur during culinary processes. Although food science had existed for some centuries, its focus had historically been…

  • Thisbe (mythological heroine)

    Pyramus and Thisbe: Thisbe, hero and heroine of a Babylonian love story, in which they were able to communicate only through a crack in the wall between their houses; the tale was related by Ovid in his Metamorphoses, Book IV. Though their parents refused to consent to their…

  • “Thisclose” to Peace in Colombia

    More than 50 years of war between the Colombian government and the guerrilla forces of the FARC (Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia; “Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia”) have seemingly come to a close. A cease-fire had been firmly in place since 2015, and on August 24, 2016, a final

  • Thisted (city, Denmark)

    Thisted, city in northwestern Jutland, Denmark. It dates from the 14th century and used to be a busy port for local commerce on the Limfjorden. Industry now includes meat processing and the manufacturing of metals and plastics. The city’s small brewery, Thisted Bryghus, is well known. Pop. (2008

  • thistle (plant)

    thistle, weedy species of Cirsium, Carduus, Echinops, Sonchus, and other plant genera of the family Asteraceae. The word thistle most often refers to prickly leaved species of Carduus and Cirsium, which have dense heads of small, usually pink or purple flowers. Plants of the genus Carduus,

  • thistle butterfly (insect)

    brush-footed butterfly: The thistle butterfly (Vanessa) is named for its principal larval host plant. Some species, such as the painted lady (V. cardui), migrate during adulthood, traveling in large groups.

  • thistle poppy (plant)

    prickly poppy: …white or yellow blooms; the crested, or thistle, poppy (A. platyceras), with 6- to 10-cm (2- to 4-inch) white or yellow blooms; and the Mexican poppy (A. mexicana), with smaller yellow blooms and light green leaves with white vein markings.

  • Thistle, The Most Ancient and Most Noble Order of the (British peerage)

    The Most Ancient and Most Noble Order of the Thistle, the Scottish order of knighthood whose modern period dates from King James VII of Scotland (James II of England), who revived it in 1687, and Queen Anne, who revived it again in 1703. As with many orders of chivalry, its origins lie much further

  • Thistlewood, Arthur (British revolutionary)

    Arthur Thistlewood was a revolutionary who in 1820, a time of economic distress and radical unrest in England, organized the Cato Street Conspiracy to assassinate all the members of the British Cabinet. The son of a successful farmer, Thistlewood visited the United States and France and returned to

  • Thiu Khao Phetchabun (mountain range, Thailand)

    Phetchabun Range, mountain range in north-central Thailand. A heavily forested southern extension of the Luang Prabang Range, it runs north-south, forming the western rim of the Khorat Plateau, and rises to 5,840 feet (1,780

  • Thíva (Greece)

    Thebes, dímos (municipality) and city, Central Greece (Modern Greek: Stereá Elláda) periféreia (region). The city lies northwest of Athens (Athína) and was one of the chief cities and powers of ancient Greece. On the acropolis of the ancient city stands the present commercial and agricultural

  • Thívai (Greece)

    Thebes, dímos (municipality) and city, Central Greece (Modern Greek: Stereá Elláda) periféreia (region). The city lies northwest of Athens (Athína) and was one of the chief cities and powers of ancient Greece. On the acropolis of the ancient city stands the present commercial and agricultural

  • thixotropy (chemistry)

    thixotropy, reversible behaviour of certain gels that liquefy when they are shaken, stirred, or otherwise disturbed and reset after being allowed to stand. Thixotropy occurs in paint, such as lithopone in oil, which flows freely when stirred and reverts to a gel-like state on standing. Quicksand, a

  • Thjórs River (river, Iceland)

    Thjórs River, longest stream in Iceland. Rising from the central plateau northeast of Hofsjökull (Hofs Glacier), it flows southwestward for 143 miles (230 km) and then discharges into the Atlantic Ocean southeast of Selfoss. The Thjórs River and its largest tributary, the Tungna (80 miles [129 km]

  • Thjórsá River (river, Iceland)

    Thjórs River, longest stream in Iceland. Rising from the central plateau northeast of Hofsjökull (Hofs Glacier), it flows southwestward for 143 miles (230 km) and then discharges into the Atlantic Ocean southeast of Selfoss. The Thjórs River and its largest tributary, the Tungna (80 miles [129 km]

  • Thlaspi (plant)

    pennycress, (genus Thlaspi), genus of plants of the mustard family (Brassicaceae), named and sometimes grown for their round seedpods. Most of the species are Eurasian, but a few are native to North and South America, mostly in mountain areas. Pennycress species can be annuals or perennials and

  • Thlaspi arvense (plant)

    pennycress: Field pennycress, or fanweed (T. arvense), has flat and circular notched pods and is a common weed throughout much of North America. Its seeds have a high oil content, and the species has gained interest as a potential feedstock for biofuel production.

  • Thlingchadinne (people)

    Dogrib, a group of Athabaskan-speaking North American First Nations (Indian) people inhabiting the forested and barren-ground areas between the Great Bear and Great Slave lakes in the Northwest Territories, Canada. There are six settlements: Behchoko (formerly Rae-Edzo), Whati (Lac la Martre),

  • Tho (people)

    Chu Van Tan: …Tan became chieftain of the Tho, a tribal ethnic minority in the mountainous regions of northern Vietnam near the China border. Before World War II, Chu Van Tan organized his people into a revolutionary militia to resist the French. By 1940–41 he had formed an effective fighting force, the Vietnam…

  • Tho language (Asian dialect)

    Tai languages: The distribution and classification of Tai languages: …now known in Vietnam as Tay. Ahom, an extinct language once spoken in Assam (India), has a considerable amount of literature. The Tai languages are divided into three linguistic groups—the Southwestern, the Central, and the Northern. Thai and Lao, the official languages of Thailand and Laos, respectively, are the best…

  • Tho Moi (Vietnamese poetry movement)

    Vietnamese literature: …and Nhat Linh, and the Tho Moi (“New Poetry”) school, which included important writers such as Xuan Dieu, Che Lan Vien, Cu Huy Can, Bang Ba Lan, and Luu Trong Lu. Both groups succeeded in throwing off antiquated Chinese literary habits, creating a new and lively literature in Quoc-ngu, the…

  • Thoburn, Isabella (American missionary)

    Isabella Thoburn was an American missionary to India whose work in education there culminated in the founding of an important woman’s college in Lucknow. Thoburn attended local schools and the Wheeling Female Seminary in Wheeling, Virginia (now West Virginia). In 1866, after she had taught for

  • Thoc-me-tony (Native American educator, author and lecturer)

    Sarah Winnemucca was a Native American educator, lecturer, tribal leader, and writer best known for her book Life Among the Piutes: Their Wrongs and Claims (1883). Her writings, valuable for their description of Northern Paiute life and for their insights into the impact of white settlement, are

  • Thocmectony (Native American educator, author and lecturer)

    Sarah Winnemucca was a Native American educator, lecturer, tribal leader, and writer best known for her book Life Among the Piutes: Their Wrongs and Claims (1883). Her writings, valuable for their description of Northern Paiute life and for their insights into the impact of white settlement, are

  • thod pa (skull cup)

    kapāla, cup made of a human skull, frequently offered by worshipers to the fierce Tantric deities of Hindu India and Buddhist Tibet. In Tibet the skull cup is displayed on the Buddhist altar and is used in ritual to offer to the ferocious dharmapāla (“defender of the faith”) divinities either wine,

  • Thökk (Norse mythology)

    Balder: After Balder’s funeral, the giantess Thökk, probably Loki in disguise, refused to weep the tears that would release Balder from death.

  • Thököly, Imre (Hungarian patriot)

    Imre Thököly was a Hungarian patriot, a leader of the Hungarian Protestants in their struggle against Austrian Habsburg rule. The scion of a rich Protestant family, Thököly moved to Transylvania after his father was executed for having had a role in the Hungarian magnates’ conspiracy against the

  • tholeiite (igneous rock)

    tholeiite, fine-grained extrusive igneous rock, a basalt that contains plagioclase feldspar (labradorite), clinopyroxene (augite with pigeonite), and iron ore (magnetite and ilmenite). Tholeiitic lavas often contain glass, but little or no olivine. Tholeiite occurs as extensive plateaus (volumes on

  • tholeiitic basalt (geology)

    basalt: Tholeiitic basaltic lavas are characterized by calcic plagioclase with augite, pigeonite or hypersthene, and olivine (rarely) as the dominant mafic minerals; basalts without olivine are also well represented. Tholeiitic basalts, which contain 45 to 63 percent silica, are rich in iron and include the tholeiites…

  • tholeiitic series (geology)

    igneous rock: Classification of volcanic and hypabyssal rocks: …the iron-rich group called the tholeiitic series and the iron-poor group called calc-alkalic. The former group is most commonly found along the oceanic ridges and on the ocean floor; the latter group is characteristic of the volcanic regions of the continental margins (convergent, or destructive, plate boundaries; see below Forms…

  • tholi (architecture)

    tholos, in ancient Greek architecture, a circular building with a conical or vaulted roof and with or without a peristyle, or surrounding colonnade. In the Mycenaean period, tholoi were large ceremonial tombs, sometimes built into the sides of hills; they were beehive-shaped and covered by a

  • tholin (organic compound)

    Pluto: The surface and interior: …arises from organic compounds called tholins.

  • tholoi (architecture)

    tholos, in ancient Greek architecture, a circular building with a conical or vaulted roof and with or without a peristyle, or surrounding colonnade. In the Mycenaean period, tholoi were large ceremonial tombs, sometimes built into the sides of hills; they were beehive-shaped and covered by a

  • Tholos (ancient building, Athens, Greece)

    Athens: Athens at its zenith: The Tholos, the round building that served as the headquarters of the executive committee of the council, was also built at this time. Lack of attention to the Acropolis was partly the result of the oath, sworn before the Battle of Plataea in 479 bce, that…

  • Tholos (archaeological site, Mycenae, Greece)

    Treasury of Atreus, a beehive, or tholos, tomb built about 1350 to 1250 bc at Mycenae, Greece. This surviving architectural structure of the Mycenaean civilization is a pointed dome built up of overhanging (i.e., corbeled) blocks of conglomerate masonry cut and polished to give the impression of a

  • tholos (architecture)

    tholos, in ancient Greek architecture, a circular building with a conical or vaulted roof and with or without a peristyle, or surrounding colonnade. In the Mycenaean period, tholoi were large ceremonial tombs, sometimes built into the sides of hills; they were beehive-shaped and covered by a

  • tholu bommalata (puppet dance)

    South Asian arts: Folk theatre: …Andhra Pradesh the puppets, called tholu bommalata (“the dance of leather dolls”), are fashioned of translucent, coloured leather. These are projected on a small screen, like colour photographic transparencies. Animals, birds, gods, and demons dominate the screen. The puppeteer manipulates them from behind with two sticks. Strong lamps are arranged…

  • tholus (architecture)

    tholos, in ancient Greek architecture, a circular building with a conical or vaulted roof and with or without a peristyle, or surrounding colonnade. In the Mycenaean period, tholoi were large ceremonial tombs, sometimes built into the sides of hills; they were beehive-shaped and covered by a

  • Thom, René Frédéric (French mathematician)

    René Frédéric Thom was a French mathematician who was awarded the Fields Medal in 1958 for his work in topology. Thom graduated from the École Normale Supérieure (now part of the Universities of Paris) in 1946, spent four years at the nearby National Centre for Scientific Research, and in 1951 was

  • Thomas (Anglo-Norman poet)

    Tristan and Isolde: …1170, however, the Anglo-Norman poet Thomas, who was probably associated with the court of Henry II of England, produced an adaptation in which the harshness of the archetype was considerably softened. A mellifluous German version of Thomas’ adaptation, by Gottfried von Strassburg, is considered the jewel of medieval German poetry.…

  • Thomas à Kempis (clergyman)

    Thomas à Kempis was a Christian theologian, the probable author of Imitatio Christi (Imitation of Christ), a devotional book that, with the exception of the Bible, has been considered one of the most influential works in Christian literature. About 1392 Thomas went to Deventer, Netherlands,

  • Thomas and Beulah (work by Dove)

    African American literature: The turn of the 21st century: …Pulitzer Prize for poetry for Thomas and Beulah (1986), her tribute to her maternal grandparents, Yusef Komunyakaa won the same prize for Neon Vernacular (1993), a collage of new and collected poems from seven previous volumes, ranging from Dien Cai Dau (1988), based on Komunyakaa’s service in the Vietnam War,…

  • Thomas Aquinas, Saint (Italian Christian theologian and philosopher)

    St. Thomas Aquinas ; canonized July 18, 1323; feast day January 28, formerly March 7) was an Italian Dominican theologian, the foremost medieval Scholastic. He developed his own conclusions from Aristotelian premises, notably in the metaphysics of personality, creation, and Providence. As a

  • Thomas Berryman Number, The (novel by Patterson)

    James Patterson: …dark stylized crime novel called The Thomas Berryman Number (1976), won the Edgar Allan Poe Award for best first novel from the Mystery Writers of America. Several novels in a similar vein followed, though he failed to attract much attention from either critics or the reading public.

  • Thomas Christians (Christian groups, India)

    Thomas Christians, indigenous Indian Christian groups who have traditionally lived in Kerala, a state on the Malabar Coast, in southwestern India. Claiming to have been evangelized by St. Thomas the Apostle, Thomas Christians ecclesiastically, liturgically, and linguistically represent one of the

  • Thomas Cook (British company)

    Thomas Cook: …conducted tour and founder of Thomas Cook and Son, a worldwide travel agency. Cook can be said to have invented modern tourism.

  • Thomas Cook AG (British company)

    Thomas Cook: …conducted tour and founder of Thomas Cook and Son, a worldwide travel agency. Cook can be said to have invented modern tourism.

  • Thomas Cook and Son (British company)

    Thomas Cook: …conducted tour and founder of Thomas Cook and Son, a worldwide travel agency. Cook can be said to have invented modern tourism.

  • Thomas Crown Affair, The (film by McTiernan [1999])

    Pierce Brosnan: The Thomas Crown Affair and Mamma Mia!: …remake of the 1968 film The Thomas Crown Affair. He later appeared in the espionage-thriller The Tailor of Panama (2001), a film adaptation of John le Carré’s novel; the romantic comedy Laws of Attraction (2004); and The Matador (2005), in which he played a weary hit man. In 2007 Brosnan…

  • Thomas Crown Affair, The (film by Jewison [1968])

    The Thomas Crown Affair, American caper film, released in 1968, featuring Steve McQueen and Faye Dunaway in a cat-and-mouse game with erotic overtones. Playing against type, McQueen portrays a rich businessman who relieves his boredom by hiring a gang to stage an audacious string of ingenious

  • Thomas Cup (badminton trophy)

    Thomas Cup, trophy signifying world supremacy in the sport of badminton. The cup was donated in 1939 by Sir George Thomas for a series of men’s international team competitions to be managed by the International Badminton Federation (IBF), of which Thomas was then president. The first tournament was

  • Thomas J. Watson Fellowship (American organization)

    Thomas J. Watson, Sr.: …his life, and launched the Thomas J. Watson Fellowship, which offered college graduates a one-year grant for independent study and travel outside the United States.

  • Thomas J. Watson Foundation (American organization)

    Thomas J. Watson, Jr.: …the fellowship program of the Thomas J. Watson Foundation, which his mother had established in 1961 in honour of her late husband. The Watson Fellowship program awarded college graduates a one-year grant for independent study and travel outside the United States.

  • Thomas Jefferson Building (building, Washington, D.C., United States)

    Library of Congress: The Thomas Jefferson Building (originally called the Congressional Library, or Main Building) houses the Main Reading Room. Designed in Italian Renaissance style, it was completed in 1897 and magnificently restored 100 years later. The John Adams Building, completed in 1939, received its current name in 1980…

  • Thomas Jefferson College (university, Chicago, Illinois, United States)

    Roosevelt University, private, coeducational institution of higher learning located in downtown Chicago, Illinois, U.S. The university, originally named Thomas Jefferson College but soon after renamed in honour of Franklin D. and Eleanor Roosevelt, was founded in 1945 to offer a diverse curriculum

  • Thomas Jefferson Memorial (monument, Washington, District of Columbia, United States)

    Jefferson Memorial, monument to Thomas Jefferson, the third president of the United States, situated in East Potomac Park on the south bank of the Tidal Basin in Washington, D.C. Authorized in 1934 as part of a beautification program for the nation’s capital, it was opposed by many modernist

  • Thomas Jefferson University (university, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States)

    Thomas Jefferson University, private, state-aided, coeducational institution of higher education in Philadelphia, Pa., U.S. It has one of the largest independent medical schools in the United States. The university comprises Jefferson Medical College, the College of Health Professions, the College

  • Thomas Jefferson: Author of America (work by Hitchens)

    Christopher Hitchens: …include Why Orwell Matters (2002), Thomas Jefferson: Author of America (2005), and Thomas Paine’s Rights of Man: A Biography (2006). With God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything (2007) Hitchens issued a rallying cry to the atheist movement; he dubbed the quartet formed by him and fellow atheists Sam…

  • Thomas Kiely: The Long Journey

    As an ideal, the Olympic Games are supposed to transcend politics, to allow athletes a chance to meet in the spirit of friendly competition. In practice, however, the Olympic Games have often reflected, and even fueled, political divisions of many kinds. A case in point is the career of Thomas

  • Thomas l’imposteur (novel by Cocteau)

    Jean Cocteau: Heritage and youth: …his novel Thomas l’imposteur (1923; Thomas the Imposter or The Imposter). He became a friend of the aviator Roland Garros and dedicated to him the early poems inspired by aviation, Le Cap de Bonne-Espérance (1919; The Cape of Good Hope). At intervals during the years 1916 and 1917, Cocteau entered…

  • Thomas Malthus on population

    Thomas Robert Malthus (1766–1834) demonstrated perfectly the propensity of each generation to overthrow the fondest schemes of the last when he published An Essay on the Principle of Population (1798), in which he painted the gloomiest picture imaginable of the human prospect. He argued that

  • Thomas Malthus’s 250th Birthday

    If you’ve ever taken an economics or ecology class, you’ll surely remember the name of Thomas Malthus, the English economist and demographer who sported the theory that population growth will always tend to outrun the food supply. This thinking is commonly referred to as Malthusianism or Malthusian

  • Thomas More (work by Roland Holst-van der Schalk)

    Henriëtte Goverdina Anna Roland Holst-van der Schalk: In her drama Thomas More (published 1912), dedicated to the German Marxist leader Karl Kautsky, she depicted the last days of the great Humanist, whom she regarded as having anticipated her own ideals for mankind.

  • Thomas Of Bayeux (archbishop of York)

    Thomas Of Bayeux was the archbishop of York from 1070, who opposed the primacy of the archbishopric of Canterbury over that of York. Consecrated by Archbishop Lanfranc of Canterbury, Thomas professed obedience to Lanfranc personally rather than to the see of Canterbury. He attempted to administer

  • Thomas of Brittany (medieval poet)

    Gottfried von Strassburg: …on the Anglo-Norman version of Thomas of Brittany (1160–70).

  • Thomas of Lancaster (English noble)

    Thomas of Lancaster was a grandson of King Henry III of England and the main figure in the baronial opposition to King Edward II. His opposition to royal power derived more from personal ambition than from a desire for reform. The son of Edmund Crouchback, 1st earl of Lancaster, he became involved

  • Thomas of London (archbishop of Canterbury)

    St. Thomas Becket ; canonized 1173; feast day December 29) was the chancellor of England (1155–62) and archbishop of Canterbury (1162–70) during the reign of King Henry II. His career was marked by a long quarrel with Henry that ended with Becket’s murder in Canterbury Cathedral. He is venerated as

  • Thomas of Štítný (Bohemian theologian)

    Germany: The Hussite controversy: …such as Conrad of Waldhauser, Thomas of Štítný, John Milíč of Kroměříž (Kremsier), and Matthew of Janov. The teachings of Conrad and Milíč had a strongly puritanical tinge; in opposition to the wealthy sacramental church with its external means of grace, they held up the ideal of the primitive church…

  • Thomas Paine’s Rights of Man: A Biography (work by Hitchens)

    Christopher Hitchens: …Author of America (2005), and Thomas Paine’s Rights of Man: A Biography (2006). With God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything (2007) Hitchens issued a rallying cry to the atheist movement; he dubbed the quartet formed by him and fellow atheists Sam Harris, Richard Dawkins, and Daniel C. Dennett…

  • Thomas process (metallurgy)

    Bessemer process: …what is now called the Thomas-Gilchrist converter, which was lined with a basic material such as burned limestone rather than an (acid) siliceous material, overcame this problem. Another drawback to Bessemer steel, its retention of a small percentage of nitrogen from the air blow, was not corrected until the 1950s.…

  • Thomas Rowley poems (work by Chatterton)

    forgery: Instances of literary forgery: …the “Thomas Rowley” poems of Thomas Chatterton (1752–70), which the youthful author attempted to pass off as the work of a medieval cleric. These poems, which caused a scholarly feud for many years, were influential in the Gothic revival. Chatterton, however, enjoys a place in English letters as a creative…

  • Thomas Sowell (American economist, economic historian, and political commentator)

    Thomas Sowell is an American economist and social commentator and also one of the leading intellectual figures of Black conservatism. A prolific writer, he has authored more than 40 books, and for many years he penned a nationally syndicated newspaper column. He studied under economist Milton

  • Thomas steel (metallurgy)

    Percy Gilchrist: …of low-phosphorus steel known as Thomas steel. In the Thomas-Gilchrist process the lining used in the converter is basic rather than acidic, and it captures the acidic phosphorus oxides formed upon blowing air through molten iron made from the high-phosphorus iron ore prevalent in Europe. Gilchrist, a graduate of the…

  • Thomas the Imposter (novel by Cocteau)

    Jean Cocteau: Heritage and youth: …his novel Thomas l’imposteur (1923; Thomas the Imposter or The Imposter). He became a friend of the aviator Roland Garros and dedicated to him the early poems inspired by aviation, Le Cap de Bonne-Espérance (1919; The Cape of Good Hope). At intervals during the years 1916 and 1917, Cocteau entered…

  • Thomas The Rhymer (Scottish poet)

    Thomas The Rhymer was a Scottish poet and prophet who was likely the author of the metrical romance Sir Tristrem, a version of the widely diffused Tristan legend. The romance was first printed in 1804 by Sir Walter Scott from a manuscript of about 1300. Thomas is now probably best known through the

  • Thomas the Tank Engine (fictional character)

    Thomas the Tank Engine, anthropomorphic locomotive engine who rides the rails of the fictional island of Sodor. Thomas the Tank Engine stars in the long-running television series Thomas & Friends. While Thomas is only a small locomotive, he has big aspirations. In his ongoing quest to be a “Really

  • Thomas the Twin (Christian Apostle)

    St. Thomas ; Western feast day December 21, feast day in Roman and Syrian Catholic churches July 3, in the Greek church October 6) was one of the Twelve Apostles. His name in Aramaic (Teʾoma) and Greek (Didymos) means “twin”; John 11:16 identifies him as “Thomas, called the Twin.” He is called

  • Thomas v. Review Board of the Indiana Employment Security Division (law case)

    Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc.: Majority opinion: …Supreme Court’s earlier decision in Thomas v. Review Board of the Indiana Employment Security Division [1981]), “our ‘narrow function…in this context is to determine’ whether the line drawn” by the plaintiffs—between what was consistent with their religion and what was not—“reflects ‘an honest conviction’…and there is no dispute that it…

  • Thomas’s pygmy mouse (rodent)

    mouse: Geographic distribution and habitat: …contains the most efficient burrowers: Thomas’s pygmy mouse (M. sorella) and its relatives have protruding upper incisors, longer claws than most species of Mus, and shorter tails relative to body length. They are rarely seen and are caught only by being dug out of their burrows.

  • Thomas’s rice rat (rodent)

    rice rat: Others, such as Thomas’s rice rat (O. dimidiatus) from southeastern Nicaragua, are rare and are found only in one or two places, and most aspects of their natural histories are unknown.

  • Thomas’s rope squirrel (rodent)

    squirrel: Natural history: Thomas’s rope squirrel (Funisciurus anerythrus) of Africa even submerges itself and swims underwater.

  • Thomas, Acts of (New Testament Apocrypha)

    mystery religion: Theology: …the Soul,” preserved in the Acts of Thomas, an apocryphal account of the journeys and death of the apostle. The hero of the hymn, who represents the soul of man, is born in the Eastern (the yonder) Kingdom; immediately after his birth, he is sent by his parents on a…

  • Thomas, Albert (French statesman)

    Albert Thomas was a French statesman, political leader, and historian, who was the first director of the League of Nations’ International Labour Organisation (1919–21). Thomas graduated from the prestigious École Normale Supérieure in Paris, where he won scholarships that enabled him to do research

  • Thomas, Ambroise (French composer)

    Ambroise Thomas was a French composer best known for his operas, particularly Mignon, written in a light, melodious style. Thomas attended the Paris Conservatoire, concluding his studies by winning the Prix de Rome in 1832 for his cantata Hermann et Ketty. Upon his return from Rome in 1835 he

  • Thomas, Angela (American author)

    Angie Thomas is an American writer whose first young-adult (YA) novel, The Hate U Give (2017), debuted at number one on The New York Times bestseller list, launching her to international fame. In the novel, Thomas tackles such volatile and timely subjects as racism, privilege, and police brutality.

  • Thomas, Angie (American author)

    Angie Thomas is an American writer whose first young-adult (YA) novel, The Hate U Give (2017), debuted at number one on The New York Times bestseller list, launching her to international fame. In the novel, Thomas tackles such volatile and timely subjects as racism, privilege, and police brutality.

  • Thomas, Ann (Welsh hymnist)

    Ann Griffiths was a Welsh hymnist whose works are characterized by complex scriptural allusions, bold figures of speech, and deep spiritual fervour. They are written in a somewhat uneven metre that is troublesome to performers. Ann Griffiths recited her hymns to her maid, Ruth Evans, who kept them

  • Thomas, Antoine (French linguist)

    Arsène Darmesteter: …French linguists Adolphe Hatzfeld and Antoine Thomas on the preparation of Dictionnaire général de la langue française . . . 2 vol. (1890–1900; “General Dictionary of the French Language . . .”). Arsène Darmesteter was the brother of the Orientalist James Darmesteter.

  • Thomas, Audrey (Canadian author)

    Audrey Thomas is an American-born Canadian author known for her autobiographical novels, short stories, and radio plays. Thomas graduated from Smith College, Northampton, Massachusetts, in 1957 and settled in Canada in 1959. After receiving an M.A. from the University of British Columbia in 1963,

  • Thomas, Audrey Grace (Canadian author)

    Audrey Thomas is an American-born Canadian author known for her autobiographical novels, short stories, and radio plays. Thomas graduated from Smith College, Northampton, Massachusetts, in 1957 and settled in Canada in 1959. After receiving an M.A. from the University of British Columbia in 1963,

  • Thomas, Augustus (American playwright)

    Augustus Thomas was a playwright important in the development of U.S. theatre for his consistent use of native material; he wrote or adapted nearly 70 plays. Primarily self-educated, Thomas worked in railway freight offices for several years and then was a newspaper writer and illustrator in Kansas