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Paul Frank suggests this collection of online encyclopedias:
http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/index.jsp
Jewish Encyclopedia
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/index.html
The Catholic Encyclopedia
http://susi.e-technik.uni-ulm.de:8080/Meyers2
Meyers Konversationslexikon
http://plato.stanford.edu
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
http://www.bartleby.com/65
Columbia Encyclopedia
http://www.paralink.com/context
Context-Online. Robert Stoll found this pile of dictionaries, searchable all
in one spot. Click on the icons and see what you get.Franc Smrke suggests this handy tip for determining whether a person is male or female from their first names: "Enter the name in Google and search Images."
http://www.pandora.com
Pandora is "a music discovery service designed to help you find and enjoy music that you'll love. It's powered by the Music Genome Project, the most comprehensive analysis of music ever undertaken. Just tell us one of your favorite songs or artists and we'll launch a streaming station to explore that part of the music universe. " Free subscription on registration for ad-supported version, paid subscriptions for ad-free version.
http://www.saur.de/akl/files/kndber.pdf
Michael Röhrig found this "definitive list of artistic professions (en,de,fr,it,es)."
http://www.geonames.de
Paul Gallagher points out this resource "if you want to know the name of a country, capital, major city, etc. in a different language, using the native script of that language."
http://www.exxun.com/esgn/gn_geonames_1.html Salvador Virgen found this collection: "Geographic names, members of the cabinet, an other international info." Look for a city (latitude and longitude provided) and click on the country name, and get a look at the map for it plus other info.
http://www.fcc.gov/fcc-bin/convertDMS Margaret Schroeder suggests this site "if you need to convert longitude/latitude coordinates between decimal degrees and degrees-minutes-seconds."
http://www.genealogia.ru/users/familysearch/index.html http://dict.buktopuha.net/data/familii.exe Paul Gallagher found this searchable collection of "seven million Russian surnames" (in Cyrillic). Also downloadable at second link.
http://bloxword.ca/jimsbmks.htm Mirella Soffio found this truly huge "treasure-trove of useful & useless links, trivia, facts and factoids.... highly addictive!". Great for browsing.
http://www.wsu.edu/~brians/errors/nonerrors.html http://www.wsu.edu/~brians/errors/errors.html#errors Omar Johnson points out these two pages about "usages people keep telling you are wrong but which are actually standard in English" as well as real errors. We may have to change the name of this column, however, since Omar also points out: "'Channel-surfing' developed as an ironic term to denote the very unathletic activity of randomly changing channels on a television set with a remote control... casual clicking on Web links was naturally quickly compared to channel-surfing, so the expression 'surfing the Web' was a natural extension of the earlier expression....It makes no sense to refer to targeted, purposeful searches for information as 'surfing'; for that reason I call my classes on Internet research techniques 'scuba-diving the Internet.'"
http://www.si.edu Online resources from the Smithsonian Institution: history, the arts, science and technology, etc. Guides in many languages.
http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/index.html
Veronica Lambert Hall found the CIA Factbook online. Some other folk on Lantra pointed out a few oddities due to the source's worldview, but otherwise it can be a useful resource.
http://www.bibliomania.com/
Michelle Asselin recommends this site for links to online classic
literature, poems, study guides, etc.
http://gutenberg.org/
Ben Sib also suggests Project Gutenberg for free online books. They also
have links to free audio books (MP3 format and others).
http://www.artecum.com/fr/musees.htm Suzanne Bernard found this French encyclopedia "Artecum" of museums, art techniques, artists, etc. Also searchable terminology help.
http://www.referencedesk.org/index.html
ReferenceDesk, suggested by Steve Dyson.
http://www.webencyclo.com/
Steve Dyson also recommends Webencyclo, an on-line encyclopedia in
French.
From Susan Rials (SR), a nice selection of general reference sites:
http://www-sci.lib.uci.edu/HSG/Ref1.html Martindales The Reference Desk is a favorite source of links to research topics.SR
http://www.ipl.org
The Internet Public Library is another good starting point.SR
Definitely good for browsing. Includes online magazines/newspapers/journals plus downloadable texts in various areas. For instance, starting from this site I found quite a few detailed articles on metrology in Quality Magazine that were useful in a translation dealing with intercomparison of length standards.
http://www.encyberpedia.com/glossary.htm
Encyberpedia has a nice collection of links to online glossaries in many subjects.SR
These are all provided by Susan Rials (SR).
http://humanities.uchicago.edu/romance/
Romance Languages Resource Page (University of Chicago)
http://www.dma.org/%7Edeand/
"Languages: Human, Computer, Government"-SR
http://www.nra.org/pub/general/gun_glossary
As the title suggests, a glossary on firearms and ammunition. (I included a more limited glossary in my talk at the 95 ATA meeting.)DD
http://www.janes.com/public/defence/glossary/glossary.html
http://www.jcave.com/~bandorm/megaterm/megaterm.htm
The first one appears to be the electronic version of Janes Defence Glossary. The second offers a downloadable glossary.DD
According to the site, the downloadable glossary MEGATERMS is a Windows based, WinHelp file containing an extensive list of terms and acronyms used by various military units, and nations. It currently contains over22,700 terms and acronyms.
http://homecentral.com/tools This offers an illustrated glossary of toolsmore home and workshop tools than industrial ones. If you have the name of the tool, you can find a description and perhaps a picture. Im still waiting for the inverse: I know what it looks like and need a name.DD Me, too, Denzel! In grad school, I was well known for calling too many such items a thingie ....
http://www.ucc.ie/info/net/acronyms/index.html
This is a site where you can search for the expansions of acronyms OR the acronym for which you know a word in the expansion. You also can submit new acronyms or submit queries about puzzling ones, although Denzel says not to expect any speedy responses to queries.
http://www.uwasa.fi/termino/tframe/index.html
Robin Stocks recommends this large collection of links to online technical glossaries, both monolingual and multilingual, and definitely worth a couple of hours browsing.
http://www.sjm.com/stjude/paceset/htm/glossary/a.htm
St. Jude Medical maintains this very useful Pacing Glossary intended for cardiac rhythm management. I found it useful when translating material on electrocardiograms. It includes tracings of ECGs, drawings of devices, and clear definitions.
http://www.om.tu-harburg.de/re/glossary.htm
This is a nice optics glossary with loads of links to more information.
http://clever.net/cam/encyclopedia.html
Encyclopaedic guide to information on the web: still growing.Brian Holton
http://www.cs.uh.edu/~clifton/macro.r.html#REFS
Quick reference: a set of basic reference sites.Brian Holton
http://www.hagalil.com
Carsten Kuckuk points out this ... huge web site covering everything
concerning Jewish life and culture ... It covers news, Jewish culture,
Hebrew and Yiddish language, music and a lot of other things. There is a
German and English entrance.
http://www.astro.virginia.edu/~eww6n/TreasureTroves.html
Eric's Treasure Troves of Science (searchable). Definitely worth a look,
his archives of tidbits and clear explanations cover chemistry,
physics, mathematics, music, rocketry, and some others. The mathematics
section has been published as the CRC Concise Encyclopedia of Mathematics
and the physics section is being prepared for publication in hardcopy.
http://europa.eu.int/comm/sdt/currencies/entable1.htm
Gabe Bokor suggests this site for countries, currencies, nouns &
adjectives in 9 languages.
http://www.uq.edu.au/~laadavid/misc.html
Large collection of legal links.
http://www.adobe.com/type/
The SH3 ( http://www.sh3.com) Fall 1999 Transletter pointed out this site for free download of the Euro symbol. Adobe provides both Mac and Windows versions, bless their little hearts.
http://babel.uoregon.edu/yamada/fonts.html
http://www.dtcc.edu/~berlin/fonts.html
David Sheridan suggested these two sites for free fonts in response to a query about Cyrillic fonts, but they have many other non-English fonts. The first link (for Mac and Windows) even has a Klingon font.... The second link is for Windows only.
http://saints.catholic.org/stsindex.html
http://saints.catholic.org/stssearch.shtml
Tim Nicholson says these are "for anyone who's ever scratched their head
over the name of a church dedicated to some obscure saint, or spent hours trying to find out just whose patron saint's day is celebrated on January 26th". The first page allows searching by name, the second by keywords. Tim also tells us that "Saint Isidore of Seville (c.560 - 636) is the patron of Internet Users."
http://www.isolyserinc.com/DBWebLink/4000+_links.asp
Susan Larsson found this source of "over 4000 safety links - for every category from heavy equipment to laboratory safety."
http://www.georgetown.edu/pdba/
Rubens Alarcon points out this Political Database of the Americas in Portuguese, French, English, and Spanish at Georgetown University.
http://bruce-hamilton.com/html.html
What color is "wheat" or "spring green" or "dodger blue"? Here is a large
list of color names -- in color, of course.
http://lexicorient.com/e.o/index.htm
Claire Liu suggests this site for Encyclopaedia of the Orient, which says it is "a one-stop online resource which covers all countries and cultures between Mauritania in the west and Iran in the east, Turkey in the north and Sudan in south."
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