Browse "Things"
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Article
Dove
Dove is the name applied to certain species of the pigeon family, especially to those of smaller size.
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Article
Dower
Dower refers to a form of marital property right. In its ancient form dower entitled a widow to a life interest in a portion of the lands owned by her deceased husband. Widowers were accorded similar rights, known as "curtesy.
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Article
Dragonfly
Dragonfly, common name for robust carnivorous insects of order Odonata [Gk "toothed," referring to mouth parts].
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Article
Drought
Drought is the condition of critically low water supply caused by persistently below-normal precipitation.
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Editorial
Drought in Palliser's Triangle
The following article is an editorial written by The Canadian Encyclopedia staff. Editorials are not usually updated.
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Article
Droulers-Tsiionhiakwatha Archaeological Site
The Droulers-Tsiionhiakwatha archaeological site is located in extreme southwest Québec, in Saint-Anicet in the Haut-Saint-Laurent area.
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Macleans
Drug Therapy for Strokes
This article was originally published in Maclean's Magazine on March 20, 2000. Partner content is not updated.One Saturday morning last November, Peggy Code collapsed outside a suburban Calgary mall. Helped to a nearby bench, the 64-year-old nurse realized she was drooling and that the entire left side of her body was insensate.
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Macleans
Drug Trials Controversy
This article was originally published in Maclean’s magazine on December 21, 1998. Partner content is not updated.By enduring frequent blood transfusions and painful injections that allow a drug to be pumped into her body at night, 14-year-old Julie Vizza has survived a rare blood disease called thalassemia that leaves her body dangerously short of oxygen.This article was originally published in Maclean's Magazine on December 21, 1998
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Article
Drumheller Strike
The Drumheller Strike of 1925 1925, ushered in a period of rival or "dual" unionism in Alberta's coalfields. The Drumheller miners, rejecting wage cuts negotiated by the United Mine Workers, struck in June 1925.
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Article
Drumlin
Drumlin, smooth, half egg-shaped or ellipsoidal hill which formed beneath Quaternary GLACIERS. Drumlins [Gaelic druim, "hill"] were first described in Ireland. They lie parallel to the direction of ice movement, the blunt (stoss) end facing up-glacier, the lee sloping down-glacier.
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Article
Dry Bean
Common bean refers to both bean plants grown solely for immature fleshy pods (garden or green bean) and those grown for dry seeds (dry bean).
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Article
Dry Fishery
That portion of the Newfoundland cod fishery in which the split and cleaned product was salted and dried on shore before being transported and sold was called the dry fishery.
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Article
Drybones Case
In R v. Drybones (1970), the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that a provision of the Indian Act was “inoperative” — meaning no longer valid or in effect — because it violated section 1(b) of the Canadian Bill of Rights, which guarantees equality before the law.
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Article
du Maurier Arts Ltd/Les Arts du Maurier Ltée
du Maurier Arts Ltd/Les Arts du Maurier Ltée (du Maurier Council for the Performing Arts/Conseil du Maurier des arts d'interpretation 1971-88, du Maurier Council for the Arts Ltd/Conseil des arts du Maurier Ltée, 1989-90).
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Article
Dubin Inquiry
Following the drug scandal at the 1988 OLYMPIC GAMES in Seoul, when Ben Johnson was stripped of his gold medal after testing positive for steroids, the federal government established the Commission of Inquiry Into the Use of Drugs and Banned Practices Intended to Increase Athletic Performance.
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