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  • Gabon: Year In Review 2003
    In February 2003, Gérard Nguema Mitoghe, president of Gabon’s opposition National Rally of Republicans, demanded the dissolution of Parliament and municipal councils, citing the high level of voter abstention in the December 2001 elections. Condemning the conduct of the Omar Bongo regime and accusing unnamed high government officials of enriching themselves with public funds, he anno...
  • Gabon: Year In Review 2004
    In January 2004 the Gabonese government closed the Omar Bongo Technical High School, the country’s largest secondary educational establishment, after four days of rioting. An official inquiry found that more than 1,000 students had been admitted with falsified credentials, and in some cases bribery and sex had been used to improve grades. Although the school was reopened ...
  • Gabon: Year In Review 2005
    Gabon continued to benefit from skyrocketing oil prices in 2005, but its reserves were rapidly being depleted. The IMF strongly recommended that a portion of oil revenues be set aside to repay external debts and to diversify the economy in order to prepare for a future with diminishing petroleum exports....
  • Gabon: Year In Review 2006
    Reelected for another seven-year term the previous November with 79% of the vote, Omar Bongo, Africa’s longest-serving head of state, was inaugurated on Jan. 19, 2006. Although opposition parties charged that votes had been purchased by oil money, international observers pronounced the poll to have been largely fair. Twenty other heads of state attended the ceremon...
  • Gabon: Year In Review 2007
    Pres. Omar Bongo’s Democratic Party (PDG) entered 2007 with an overwhelming majority in the parliament, having won 80 of the 120 seats in the Dec. 17, 2006, Gabonese legislative elections. Parties allied to the PDG won 13 seats, independents gained 4, and the fragmented opposition took only 16; 7 seats remained undecided. Vice Premier and Minister of Social Affairs Louis-...
  • Gabon: Year In Review 2008
    On Jan. 9, 2008, Interior Minister André Mba Obame suspended four groups of nongovernment organizations (NGOs), which were accused of having interfered in Gabon’s national politics after criticizing the government’s use of public funds. Two days later the government announced that in an effort to reduce expenses cabinet ministers would no longer be provided with official cars....
  • Gabon: Year In Review 2009
    Gabonese Pres. Omar Bongo died on June 8, 2009, after he suffered a fatal heart attack while abroad for cancer treatment. In power for 41 years, at the time of his death he was Africa’s longest-serving head of state. His body was flown to Gabon on June 11, and the state funeral took place in Libreville on June 16. French Pres. Nicholas Sarkozy, in attendance, was jeered by crowds protesting...
  • Gabonese (nationality)
    Several of these societies hold messianic beliefs structured around the myth of the return of the original god or man. The Gabonese of equatorial Africa believe that Kmvum (the original man) once lived among them but that their behaviour brought on the “day of separation.” His return, they believe, will bring joy, abundance, and happiness. Similarly, the Altaic Tatars of ......
  • Gabonese Democratic Party (political party, Gabon)
    Pres. Omar Bongo’s Democratic Party (PDG) entered 2007 with an overwhelming majority in the parliament, having won 80 of the 120 seats in the Dec. 17, 2006, Gabonese legislative elections. Parties allied to the PDG won 13 seats, independents gained 4, and the fragmented opposition took only 16; 7 seats remained undecided. Vice Premier and Minister of Social Affairs......
  • Gabonese Republic
    Country, central Africa....
  • Gaboon viper (snake)
    extremely venomous but usually docile ground-dwelling snake found in tropical forests of central and western Africa. It is the heaviest venomous snake in Africa, weighing 8 kg (18 pounds), and it grows to a length of 2 metres (about 7 feet). The Gaboon viper also possess...
  • Gabor, Dennis (British engineer)
    Hungarian-born electrical engineer who won the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1971 for his invention of holography, a system of lensless, three-dimensional photography that has many applications....
  • Gabor, Eva (American actress)
    U.S. actress (b. Feb. 11, 1921, Budapest, Hung.--d. July 4, 1995, Los Angeles, Calif.), was the youngest (behind Magda and Zsa Zsa) of the glamorous Gabor sisters and together with Zsa Zsa, to whom she bore a striking resemblance, had achieved worldwide celebrity status by the 1950s; the two often made headlines as a result of their many marriages (Eva married five times). Gabor was best remembere...
  • Gábor, Sári (Hungarian actress and socialite)
    Hungarian actress and socialite who was as famous for her glamorous, sometimes scandalous personal life as she was for her television and film appearances....
  • Gabor, Zsa Zsa (Hungarian actress and socialite)
    Hungarian actress and socialite who was as famous for her glamorous, sometimes scandalous personal life as she was for her television and film appearances....
  • Gaboriau, Émile (French author)
    French novelist who is best known as the father of the roman policier (detective novel). He has been described as the Edgar Allan Poe of France....
  • Gaborone (Botswana)
    town, capital of Botswana. The seat of government was transferred there from Mafeking (now spelled Mafikeng), South Africa, in 1965, one year before Botswana became independent of Britain. Gaborone is located on the Cape-Zimbabwe railway and is the site of government offices, parliament buildings, health f...
  • Gabra Iyasus, Afawark (Ethiopian author)
    Two writers created the foundation for the Amharic literary tradition. The first novel written in Amharic was Libb-waled tarik (1908; “An Imagined Story”), by Afawark Gabra Iyasus. The oral storytelling tradition is clearly in evidence in this novel, in which a girl disguised as a boy becomes the centre of complex love involvements, the climax of which......
  • Gabre-Eyesus, Afeworq (Ethiopian author)
    Two writers created the foundation for the Amharic literary tradition. The first novel written in Amharic was Libb-waled tarik (1908; “An Imagined Story”), by Afawark Gabra Iyasus. The oral storytelling tradition is clearly in evidence in this novel, in which a girl disguised as a boy becomes the centre of complex love involvements, the climax of which......
  • Gabre-Medhin, Tsegaye (Ethiopian author)
    Ethiopian playwright and poet, who wrote in Amharic and English....
  • Gabreski, Francis Stanley (American pilot)
    American fighter pilot (b. Jan. 28, 1919, Oil City, Pa.—d. Jan. 31, 2002, Huntington, N.Y.), shot down more than three dozen enemy planes as an ace fighter pilot in both World War II and the...
  • Gabri ware (Islamic pottery)
    Būyid pottery, usually called Gabrī ware, is a red-bodied earthenware covered with a white slip (liquified clay washed over the body before firing). Designs were executed by scratching through the slip to reveal the red body beneath. Yellowish or green lead glazes were used. Some pieces were decorated with linear patterns, others with elaborate representational designs, which often.....
  • Gabriel (American bondsman)
    American bondsman who planned the first major slave rebellion in U.S. history (Aug. 30, 1800). His abortive revolt greatly increased the whites’ fear of the slave population throughout the South....
  • Gabriel (missile)
    ...a range of about 17 miles and supplemented its active radar guidance with passive infrared homing. The Penguin was exported widely for fighter-bomber, attack boat, and helicopter use. The Israeli Gabriel, a 1,325-pound missile with a 330-pound warhead launched from both aircraft and ships, employed active radar homing and had a range of 20 miles....
  • Gabriel (archangel)
    in the three Abrahamic religions—Judaism, Christianity, and Islam—one of the archangels. Gabriel was the heavenly messenger sent to Daniel to explain the vision of the ram and the he-goat and to communicate the prediction of the Seventy Weeks. He was also employed to announce the birth of John the Baptist to Ze...
  • Gabriel, Ange-Jacques (French architect)
    French architect who built or enlarged many châteaus and palaces during the reign of Louis XV. He was one of the most important and productive French architects of the 18th century....
  • Gabriel, Jacques-Ange (French architect)
    French architect who built or enlarged many châteaus and palaces during the reign of Louis XV. He was one of the most important and productive French architects of the 18th century....
  • Gabriel, Peter (British musician)
    former lead singer of the progressive rock band Genesis and solo artist known for the intelligence and depth of his lyrics and for his commitment to various political causes....
  • Gabriel synthesis (chemistry)
    ...of multiple alkylation, methods have been devised for “blocking” substitution so that only one alkyl group is introduced. The Gabriel synthesis is one such method; it utilizes phthalimide, C6H4(CO)2NH, whose one acidic hydrogen atom has been removed upon the addition of a base such as KOH to......
  • Gabrieleño (people)
    any of two, or possibly three, dialectally and culturally related North American Indian groups who spoke a language of Uto-Aztecan stock and lived in the lowlands, along the seacoast, and on islands in southern California at the time of Spanish colonization. The Gabrielino proper inhabited what are now southern and eastern L...
  • Gabrieli, Andrea (Italian composer)
    Italian Renaissance composer and organist, known for his madrigals and his large-scale choral and instrumental music for public ceremonies. His finest work was composed for the acoustic resources of the Cathedral of St. Mark in Venice. He was the uncle of Giovanni Gabrieli....
  • Gabrieli, Giovanni (Italian composer)
    Italian Renaissance composer, organist, and teacher, celebrated for his sacred music, including massive choral and instrumental motets for the liturgy....
  • Gabrielino (people)
    any of two, or possibly three, dialectally and culturally related North American Indian groups who spoke a language of Uto-Aztecan stock and lived in the lowlands, along the seacoast, and on islands in southern California at the time of Spanish colonization. The Gabrielino proper inhabited what are now southern and eastern L...
  • Gabrilowitsch, Ossip Salomonovich (Russian pianist)
    Russian-born American pianist noted for the elegance and subtlety of his playing....
  • Gabrovo (Bulgaria)
    town, north-central Bulgaria. It is situated on both banks of the Yantra River, at the foot of the Shipka Pass in the Balkan Mountains. A major industrial centre, Gabrovo has a high in-migration population from the surrounding area. C...
  • Gabryella (Polish author)
    ...discernible in Józef Korzeniowski’s novels Spekulant (1846; “The Speculator”) and Kollokacja (1847; “The Collocation”). A woman novelist, Narcyza Żmichowska (pseudonym Gabryella), produced Poganka (1846; “The Pagan”), a psychological allegory anticipating 20th-century sensibility in its subtle ...
  • Gabú (region, Guinea-Bissau)
    region located in northeastern Guinea-Bissau. The Corubal River flows east-west through the southern half of Gabú, while the Colufe River flows east-west through the centre and empties into the Gêba River. The Gêba River in turn forms the northwestern border with the neighbouring region of Bafatá. The Gabú ...
  • Gabú (Guinea-Bissau)
    town located in eastern Guinea-Bissau. Gabú is situated along the Colufe River, a tributary of the Gêba River, and is an agricultural marketing centre. Peanuts (groundnuts), mostly grown by the primarily Muslim Fulani (Fulbe) peoples, are the principal crop. The town is connected by road to Bissau, the national capital, and to ...
  • Gabú Plain (plain, Guinea-Bissau)
    The coastal area is demarcated by a dense network of drowned valleys called rias. The Bafatá Plateau is drained by the Geba and Corubal rivers. The Gabú Plain occupies the northeastern portion of the country and is drained by the Cacheu and Geba rivers and their tributaries. The interior plains are part of the southern edge of the Sénégal River basin. The uniform......
  • Gabú Plateau (plateau, Guinea-Bissau)
    ...Colufe River flows east-west through the centre and empties into the Gêba River. The Gêba River in turn forms the northwestern border with the neighbouring region of Bafatá. The Gabú Plateau, with an elevation of some 300–500 feet (90–150 metres), extends north of the Corubal River to the border with Senegal. South of the Corubal River are the Bo...
  • gaccha (Jainism)
    among the image-worshipping Shvetambara sect of the Indian religion Jainism, a group of monks and their lay followers who claim descent from eminent monastic teachers. Although some 84 separate gacchas have appeared since the 7th–8th century, only a few have survived, such as the Kharatara (located ...
  • gachupín (Latin American colonist)
    any of the colonial residents of Latin America from the 16th through the early 19th centuries who had been born in Spain. The name refers to the Iberian Peninsula. Among the American-born in Mexico the peninsulars were contemptuously called gachupin...
  • Gacy, John Wayne (American serial killer)
    American serial killer whose murders of 33 boys and young men in the 1970s received international media attention and shocked his suburban Chicago community, where he was known for his sociability and his performance as a clown at charitable events and childrens’ parties....
  • GAD (enzyme)
    ...of the postsynaptic membrane. GABA is widely distributed in the brain, being especially prevalent at higher levels of the central nervous system. It is produced from glutamate by the enzyme glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD). Consequently, the concentrations of GABA and GAD parallel each other in the nervous system....
  • Gad (Hebrew patriarch)
    In reconstructing the history of Israelite prophecy, the prophets Samuel, Gad, Nathan, and Elijah (11th to 9th centuries bc) have been viewed as representing a transitional stage from the so-called vulgar prophetism to the literary prophetism, which some scholars believed represented a more ethical and therefore a “higher” form of prophecy. The literary prophets also ha...
  • Gad (Hebrew tribe)
    one of the 12 tribes of Israel that in biblical times composed the people of Israel who later became the Jewish people. The tribe was named after the elder of two sons born to Jacob and Zilpah, a maidservant of Jacob’s first wife, Leah....
  • Gad al-Haq Ali Gad al-Haq (Egyptian religious leader)
    Egyptian religious leader who, as grand sheikh of al-Azhar, the Muslim world’s highest religious body, issued rulings based on strict Islamic orthodoxy, including support for female circumcision and harsh punishment for those breaking the fast during Ramadan (b. April 5, 1917--d. March 15, 1996)....
  • gad fly (insect)
    any member of the insect family Tabanidae (order Diptera), but more specifically any member of the genus Tabanus. These stout flies, as small as a housefly or as large as a bumble bee, are sometimes known as greenheaded monsters; their metallic or iridescent eyes meet dorsally in the male and are separate in the female. Gad fly, a nickname, may refer either to the fly’s roving habits...
  • gada (sociology)
    ...people who inhabited the upper basin of the Genalē (Jubba) River in what is now southern Ethiopia and northern Kenya. Oromo society was based upon an “age-set” system known as gada, in which all males born into an eight-year generation moved together through all the stages of life. The warrior classes (luba) raided and rustled in order to prove themselves, and...
  • Gadaba language
    language spoken in India, one of the Munda languages belonging to the Austro-Asiatic family of languages. Dialects include Gadba and Gudwa....
  • Gadādhara Bhaṭṭācāryya (Indian philosopher)
    ...of this school were Pakṣadhara Miśra of Mithilā, Vāsudeva Sārvabhauma (16th century), his disciple Raghunātha Śiromaṇi (both of Bengal), and Gadādhara Bhaṭṭācāryya....
  • Gadah Ha-Maʾaravit, Ha- (region, Palestine)
    Area (pop., 2009 est.: 2,733,000 [including 305,000 Israeli Jews]), west of the Jordan River and east of Jerusalem....
  • Gadāʾī (Uzbek poet)
    ...munajaat (hymns), ghazals, and qasidas (odes) devoted to Ulūgh Beg. But it was Gadāʾī who was the most remarkable Uzbek poet of the 14th and 15th centuries. Although his divan has been preserved, very little of his life is known. Even the poet’s or...
  • Gadamer, Hans-Georg (German philosopher)
    German philosopher whose system of philosophical hermeneutics, derived in part from concepts of Wilhelm Dilthey, Edmund Husserl, and Martin Heidegger, was influential in 20th-century philosophy, aesthetics, theology, and criticism....
  • Gadames (oasis, Libya)
    oasis, northwestern Libya, near the Tunisian and Algerian borders. It lies at the bottom of a wadi (seasonal river) bordered by the steep slopes of the stony al-Ḥamrāʾ Plateau. Located at the junction of ancient Saharan caravan routes, the town was the Roman stronghold Cydamus (whose ruins remain). It was an episcopal see under the Byzantines, and columns of the Christian chur...
  • Gadar Party (Sikh political organization)
    (Urdu: “Revolution”), an early 20th-century movement among Indians, principally Sikhs living in North America, to end British rule in their homeland of India. The movement originated with an organization of immigrants in California called the Hindustani Workers of the Pacific Coast. Shortly after the outbreak ...
  • Gadara (ancient city, Jordan)
    ancient city of Palestine, a member of the Decapolis, located just southeast of the Sea of Galilee in Jordan. Gadara first appeared in history when it fell to the Seleucid Antiochus the Great (218 bc); the Jewish king Alexander Jannaeus to...
  • Gadd, Cyril John (British historian)
    The first serious attempt at establishing a chronology for the Indus civilization relied on cross-dating with Mesopotamia. In this way, Cyril John Gadd cited the period of Sargon of Akkad (2334–2279 bce) and the subsequent Isin-Larsa Period (2017–1794 bce) as the time when trade between ancient India a...
  • Gadda, Carlo Emilio (Italian author)
    Italian essayist, short-story writer, and novelist outstanding particularly for his original and innovative style, which has been compared with that of James Joyce....
  • Gaddang (people)
    ...Bontoc, southern Kalinga, Tinggian) nearly all live in populous villages, but one ethnic unit (the Ifugao) has small farmsteads of kinsmen dotted throughout the rice terraces. The second group (the Gaddang, northern Kalinga, and Isneg or Apayao) are sparsely settled in hamlets or farmsteads around which new gardens are cleared as the soil is worked out; some Gaddang live in tree houses....
  • Gaddi (people)
    ...peoples speaking other Tibeto-Burman languages, while the Lesser Himalayas are the home of Indo-European language speakers. Among the latter are the Kashmiri people of the Vale of Kashmir and the Gaddi and Gujari, who live in the hilly areas of the Lesser Himalayas. Traditionally, the Gaddi are a hill people; they possess large flocks of sheep and herds of goats and go down with them from......
  • Gaddi, Agnolo (Italian artist)
    son and pupil of Taddeo Gaddi, who was himself the major pupil of the Florentine master Giotto. Agnolo was an influential and prolific artist who was the last major Florentine painter stylistically descended from Giotto....
  • Gaddi, Taddeo (Italian artist)
    pupil and most faithful follower of the Florentine master Giotto. A capable artist, although lacking his teacher’s comprehensive aesthetic vision, he was, after Giotto’s death, the leading Florentine painter for three decades....
  • Gaddis, William (American author)
    American novelist of complex, satiric works who is considered one of the best of the post-World War II Modernist writers....
  • Gaddis, William Thomas (American author)
    American novelist of complex, satiric works who is considered one of the best of the post-World War II Modernist writers....
  • Gade, Niels Vilhelm (Danish composer)
    Danish composer who founded the Romantic nationalist school in Danish music. He studied violin and composition and became acquainted with Danish poetry and folk music. Both Mendelssohn and Schumann, who were his friends, were attracted by the Scandinavian character of his music. Schumann...
  • Gades (Spain)
    city, capital, and principal seaport of Cádiz provincia (province) in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Andalusia, southwestern Spain. The city is situated on a long, narrow peninsula extending into the Gulf of Cádiz...
  • Gades, Antonio (Spanish dancer and choreographer)
    Spanish dancer and choreographer (b. Nov. 14, 1936, Elda, Spain—d. July 20, 2004, Madrid, Spain), popularized flamenco and other Spanish dances with his elegant performances and powerful choreography. He was trained by the great dancer Pilar López—who chose the name Gades as more suitable for him—and worked with her company for nearly a decade before forming his own, Ba...
  • Gadfly (missile)
    ...new generation of Soviet SAM systems entered service in the 1980s. These included the SA-10 Grumble, a Mach-6 mobile system with a 60-mile range deployed in both strategic and tactical versions; the SA-11 Gadfly, a Mach-3 semiactive radar homing system with a range of 17 miles; the SA-12 Gladiator, a track-mobile replacement of Ganef; the SA-13 Gopher, a replacement for Gaskin; and the SA-14, a...
  • gadfly petrel (bird)
    any of several species of petrels distinguished from others by their fluttering type of flight. See petrel....
  • Gadhafi, Moammar (Libyan statesman)
    de facto leader of Libya from 1969 and a controversial Arab statesman....
  • Gadhipur (India)
    town, southeastern Uttar Pradesh state, northern India. It is located on the Ganges (Ganga) River northeast of Varanasi (Benares). Its ancient name of Gadhipur was changed to Ghazipur about 1330, reputedly in honour of Ghāzī Malik, a Muslim ruler of the Tughluq dynasty. The town was a strategically important river port under th...
  • Gadi (people)
    ...peoples speaking other Tibeto-Burman languages, while the Lesser Himalayas are the home of Indo-European language speakers. Among the latter are the Kashmiri people of the Vale of Kashmir and the Gaddi and Gujari, who live in the hilly areas of the Lesser Himalayas. Traditionally, the Gaddi are a hill people; they possess large flocks of sheep and herds of goats and go down with them from......
  • Gadia Lohar (people)
    ...In the eastern part of the state, these groups include the Mina (and the related Meo), most of whom are farmers; the Banjara, who have been known as traveling tradesmen and artisans; and the Gadia Lohar, another historically itinerant tribe, who traditionally have made and repaired agricultural and household implements. The Bhil, one of the oldest communities in India, generally inhabit......
  • Gadifer de La Salle (Poitevin adventurer)
    Poitevin adventurer who, with Jean de Béthencourt, began the conquest of the Canary Islands....
  • Gadiformes (fish order)
    ...fishes have been described. They range in length from just a few centimetres to roughly 2 metres (about 7 feet). Well-known forms include the anglerfish (order Lophiiformes) and the cod (order Gadiformes)....
  • Gadinidae (gastropod family)
    ...specialization.)Superfamily PatelliformiaBrackish water or marine limpets with (Siphonariidae) gill-like structures or with a lung (Gadinidae).Superfamily AmphibolaceaOperculum present; shell conical; with pulmonary cavity; brackish water; burrow in sand; 1......
  • Gadir (Spain)
    city, capital, and principal seaport of Cádiz provincia (province) in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Andalusia, southwestern Spain. The city is situated on a long, narrow peninsula extending into the Gulf of Cádiz...
  • gadje (people)
    ...refer to themselves by one generic name, Rom (meaning “man” or “husband”), and to all non-Roma by the term gadje (also spelled gadze or gaje; a term with a pejorative connotation meaning “bumpkin,”.....
  • Gadjusek, Daniel Carleton (American physician)
    American physician and medical researcher, corecipient (with Baruch S. Blumberg) of the 1976 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for his research on the causal agents of various degenerative neurological disorders....
  • Gadolin, Johan (Finnish chemist)
    In 1794, Johan Gadolin, a Finnish chemist, while investigating a rare Swedish mineral, discovered a new earth in impure form, which he believed to be a new element and to which he gave the name ytterbia, from Ytterby, the village where the ore was found. The name, however, was soon shortened to yttria. In 1803, from the same mineral, later named gadolinite in Gadolin’s honour, another new e...
  • gadolinite (mineral)
    ...a new element and to which he gave the name ytterbia, from Ytterby, the village where the ore was found. The name, however, was soon shortened to yttria. In 1803, from the same mineral, later named gadolinite in Gadolin’s honour, another new earth was reported in the literature independently by several chemists. The new earth became known as ceria, from the asteroid Ceres, which had just...
  • gadolinium (chemical element)
    (Gd), chemical element, rare-earth metal of the lanthanoid series of the periodic table. Silvery white and moderately ductile, the metal reacts slowly with oxygen and water. Below 17° C it is ferromagnetic and at very low temperatures, supercond...
  • gadolinium sulfate octahydrate (chemical compound)
    (Gd), chemical element, rare-earth metal of the lanthanoid series of the periodic table. Silvery white and moderately ductile, the metal reacts slowly with oxygen and water. Below 17° C it is ferromagnetic and at very low temperatures, supercond...
  • Gador, Sierra de (mountain, Spain)
    The province contains the lead mines of the Sierra de Gador (the richest in the world during the 19th century), and the Marquesado de Zenete region is one of Spain’s largest producers of iron ore. The Granada coast (part of the Costa del Sol) includes the thriving beach resorts of Motril, Salobreña, and Almuñécar. Other important towns are Guadix, Loja, and Baza. The......
  • gadrooning (architecture)
    in architectural decoration, surfaces worked into a regular series of (vertical) concave grooves or convex ridges, frequently used on columns. In Classical architecture fluting and reeding are used in the columns of all the orders except the Tuscan. In the Doric order there are 20 grooves on a column and in the Ionic, Corint...
  • Gadsden (Alabama, United States)
    city, seat (1866) of Etowah county, northeastern Alabama, U.S. It is situated on the Coosa River in the Appalachian foothills, 65 miles (105 km) northeast of Birmingham. The original farming settlement was known as Double Springs, and the town was founded there in 1846 as a steamboat station. It was renamed for Ja...
  • Gadsden, James (American politician)
    U.S. soldier, diplomat, and railroad president, whose name is associated with the Gadsden Purchase....
  • Gadsden Purchase (United States-Mexican history)
    (Dec. 30, 1853), transaction that followed the conquest of much of northern Mexico by the United States in 1848. Known in Mexican history as the sale of the Mesilla Valley, it assigned to the United States nearly 30,000 additional square miles (78,000 square km) of northern Mexican territory (La Mesilla), ...
  • Gadsden Purchase Treaty (United States-Mexican history)
    (Dec. 30, 1853), transaction that followed the conquest of much of northern Mexico by the United States in 1848. Known in Mexican history as the sale of the Mesilla Valley, it assigned to the United States nearly 30,000 additional square miles (78,000 square km) of northern Mexican territory (La Mesilla), ...
  • Gadūk Pass (mountain pass, Iran)
    ...or another of the slopes. Only two passes allow a relatively easy crossing in a single ascent—these are the Kandevān Pass, between the Karaj and the Chālūs rivers, and the Gadūk Pass, between the Hableh and the Tālā rivers. The main divide runs generally south of the highest crest, which—with the exception of the towering and isolated cone...
  • gadulka (musical instrument)
    The word gusla sometimes refers also to the gadulka, a similar Bulgarian instrument with three or four strings. The Russian gusli, an unrelated instrument, is a psaltery....
  • Gadus (fish genus)
    fish genus of the family Gadidae, including the individuals and groups known as bib, cod, pollock, and whiting....
  • Gadus luscus (fish)
    common fish of the cod family, Gadidae, found in the sea along European coastlines. The bib is a rather deep-bodied fish with a chin barbel, three close-set dorsal fins, and two close-set anal fins. It usually grows no longer than about 30 cm (12 inches) and is copper red with darker bars....
  • Gadus macrocephalus (fish)
    A North Pacific species of cod, G. macrocephalus, is very similar in appearance to the Atlantic form. In Japan this fish, which is found in both the eastern and western Pacific, is called tara; it is fished both for food and for liver oil. Smaller than the Atlantic cod, it grows to a maximum of about 75 cm (30 inches) long and is mottled brownish with a white lateral line. ...
  • Gadus merlangus (fish)
    (species Gadus, or Merlangius, merlangus), common marine food fish of the cod family, Gadidae. The whiting is found in European waters and is especially abundant in the North Sea. It is carnivorous and feeds on invertebrates and small fishes. It has three dorsal and two anal fins and a chin barbel that, if present, is very small...
  • Gadus morhua (fish species)
    (species Gadus morhua), large and economically important marine fish of the family Gadidae, found on both sides of the North Atlantic. The cod, a cold-water fish, generally remains near the bottom, ranging from inshore regions to deep waters. It is valued for its...
  • Gadus virens (fish)
    (Pollachius, or Gadus, virens), North Atlantic fish of the cod family, Gadidae. It is known as saithe, or coalfish, in Europe. The pollock is an elongated fish, deep green with a pale lateral line and a pale belly. It has a small chin barbel and, like the cod, has three dorsal and two anal fins. A carnivorous, lively, usu...
  • gadwall (bird)
    (Anas strepera), small, drably coloured duck of the family Anatidae, a popular game bird. Almost circumpolar in distribution in the Northern Hemisphere, the gadwall breeds above latitude 40° and winters between 20–40°. In North America...
  • gadze (people)
    ...refer to themselves by one generic name, Rom (meaning “man” or “husband”), and to all non-Roma by the term gadje (also spelled gadze or gaje; a term with a pejorative connotation meaning “bumpkin,”.....

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