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Featuring over 1,000 alphabetically arranged, biographical entries, Who's Who in World War One builds up a complete and vivid picture of the major figures of the Great War. The subjects are drawn not only from the political and military spheres of all thirty-two nations involved, but also from the social and cultural life of the period. This book's breadth of coverage makes it the definitive biographical guide to the First World War; * from the British air ace, Albert Ball, to the German foreign secretary, Richard von Kuhlmann * from David Lloyd George to Rasputin * from the British war poet Siegfried Sassoon to the Serbian assassin Trifko Grabez and the Emperor Wilhelm II. Each entry provides biographical data and basic factual information about its subject's role in the Great War, and in the case of major figures there is also an assessment of their reputation in the light of current scholarship. Maps, cross-referencing, a list of military ranks, a guide to further reading and a thorough introduction complete what is at once a comprehensive work of reference and a fascinating overview of a crucial period in twentieth century history. eBook available with sample pages: 0203438817
Beavis Wood (d. 1814) was the Town Clerk of Tiverton for over forty
years, from 1765 to 1806. This volume presents a selection of his
letters to Nathaniel Ryder, MP for Tiverton for much of this
period, and to other correspondents. They give a colourful account
of the society, local politics, and economy of Tiverton, and tell
us much about urban society and politics in the period.
Many of the earliest books, particularly those dating back to the
1900s and before, are now extremely scarce and increasingly
expensive. We are republishing these classic works in affordable,
high quality, modern editions, using the original text and artwork.
Q.--What is meant by latent heat? A.--By latent heat is meant the
heat existing in bodies which is not discoverable by the touch or
by the thermometer, but which manifests its existence by producing
a change of state. Heat is absorbed in the liquefaction of ice, and
in the vaporization of water, yet the temperature does not rise
during either process, and the heat absorbed is therefore said to
become latent. The term is somewhat objectionable, as the effect
proper to the absorption of heat has in each case been made
visible; and it would be as reasonable to call hot water latent
steam.
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