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Vital articles / level 5 — 0-9, A-F
- (ε, δ)-definition of limit – Formalization of a limit in mathematics
- 16-bit computing – Computer architecture bit width
- 1889 Apia cyclone – Category 1 South Pacific cyclone in 1889
- 1902 eruption of Mount Pelée – Volcanic eruption on Martinique
- 1913 Ottoman coup d'état – Coup d'etat that took place in the Ottoman Empire in 1913
- 1921–1922 famine in Tatarstan – Mass starvation in the Tatar ASSR
- 1932 New South Wales constitutional crisis – Political crisis in New South Wales resulting in removal of the Premier
- 1935 Shinchiku-Taichū earthquake – Earthquake in Taiwan
- 1987 Fijian coups d'état – Two coups that overthrew Prime Minister Timoci Bavadra and the monarchy
- 1998 Russian financial crisis – Mid-1998 economic crisis in Russia
- 1999 Jiji earthquake – Extreme level earthquake in Taiwan
- 2000 Fijian coup d'état – Coup that overthrew Prime Minister Mahendra Chaudhry
- 2000s in science and technology
- 2004 Haitian coup d'état – Political event in Haiti
- 2005–2006 Fijian political crisis – Political crisis in Fiji
- 21st-century classical music – 21st-century Western contemporary classical music
- A Dance of the Forests – Play by Wole Soyinka
- A Madman's Diary
- AC power – Power in alternating current systems
- Abadan Crisis – Oil crisis in Iran from 1951 to 1954
- Abhidharma – Buddhist traditions and texts dating from the 3rd century BCE onwards
- Act utilitarianism – Flavour of utilitarianism
- Adagio in G minor – 1958 musical work by Remo Giazotto
- Administrative court – Specialized court dealing with exercise of public power disputes
- Advertising research – Study conducted to improve advertising
- Advocacy journalism – Genre of journalism that adopts a non-objective viewpoint
- Aerial advertising – Type of advertisement
- Affirmation and negation – Grammatical category indicating truth or falsehood
- African theatre of World War I – Theatre of operations during World War I
- African-American history
- Agricultural chemistry – Agricultural sub-discipline of applied chemistry
- Agricultural cycle – Annual cycle of crop growth/harvest activities
- Agricultural education – Training in farming, natural resources, and land management
- Agricultural extension – Farm efficiency through education
- Agricultural geography – Sub-discipline of human geography
- Agricultural land – Land used for agricultural purposes
- Agricultural philosophy – Philosophical doctrine
- Agricultural soil science – Branch of soil science
- Agriculture in Mesoamerica – Account of archaic North American agriculture
- Agriculture in ancient Rome – None
- Agro-terrorism – Malicious attacks on agriculture
- Agrometeorology – Study of weather
- Aid agency – Organization dedicated to distributing aid
- Air medical services – Use of air vehicles to transport patients
- Air warfare of World War II – Role of aerial warfare during WWII
- Aix-Marseille University – Public university in Provence, France
- Al-Gama'a (TV series)
- Alcántara Bridge – Bridge in Extremadura, Spain
- Alexiad – 12th-century Byzantine history by Anna Komnene
- Algebraic combinatorics – Area of combinatorics
- Algebraic equation – Polynomial equation, generally univariate
- Algebraic expression – Type of mathematical expression using basic operations (+, -, ×, ÷, powers, and roots)
- Algebraic function – Mathematical function
- Alternative media – Media sources that differ from established or dominant types of media
- Aluminum can – Small container made of aluminum, typically for drinks
- Amalgamation property – Concept in model theory
- Amateur theatre – Theatre performed by amateur actors and singers
- American Standard Version – 1901 English translation of the Bible
- Amnesty law – Law that provides immunity for past crimes
- Analogue electronics – Electronic systems with a continuously variable signal
- Analytical hierarchy – Concept in mathematical logic and set theory
- Anchovies as food – Preserved fish
- Ancient Corinth – Ancient city-state in mainland Greece
- Ancient Egyptian agriculture
- Ancient Hawaii – Period in Hawaiian history
- Ancient Roman technology – Technological accomplishments of the ancient Roman civilization
- Ancient art – Art by advanced cultures of ancient societies
- Ancient literature
- Anglo-Saxon art – English art of the Anglo-Saxon period
- Anglo-Saxon charters – Documents dealing with Anglo-Saxon legal affairs
- Animal breeding – Branch of animal science
- Animal training – Teaching animals specific responses to specific conditions or stimuli
- Animal-free agriculture – Farming without the use of animals or their products
- Animation in the United States during the silent era
- Anshar – Mesopotamian primordial god
- Antenna array – Set of multiple antennas which work together
- Anthropological linguistics – Study of language within historical and social contexts
- Apple cider vinegar – Vinegar made from fermented apple juice
- Application checkpointing – A technique for inserting fault tolerance into computing systems
- Aquaculture of catfish – Farming of African Mud Catfish (Clarias gariepinus) for Food
- Aquaculture of salmonids – Fish farming and harvesting under controlled conditions
- Aquaculture of tilapia – Third most important fish in aquaculture after carp and salmon
- Arab Charter on Human Rights – 2004 multinational agreement
- Arab States Broadcasting Union
- Arab cinema
- Aranyaka – Part of the ancient Indian Vedas
- Arboriculture – Management and study of trees and other woody plants
- Architectural painting – Painting genre
- Architecture of Africa
- Architecture of Israel
- Argumenty i Fakty – Russian weekly socio-political newspaper
- Armenian question – Political debate of 1878 Berlin Congress
- Arrábida Bridge – Bridge in Portugal
- Art and culture law – Law relating Art and culture
- Artemis and the Stag – Bronze sculpture
- Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts – American variety show (1946–1958)
- Arthur Kill Bridge
- Articulation (music) – Musical parameter affecting sounding of a note
- Artificial language – Emergent language of experiments or simulations
- Arts journalism
- Ascot tie – Neckband with wide pointed wings
- Asian Civilisations Museum – Museum in Singapore
- Assault (tort) – Tort of intentional, offensive contact
- Assimilation (phonology) – Phenomenon in linguistics
- Association des États Généraux des Étudiants de l'Europe – Student organization in Europe
- Association of Shinto Shrines – Religious organization overseeing Shinto shrines in Japan
- Astoria–Megler Bridge – Bridge in Oregon and Washington, U.S.
- Astronomical filter – Telescope accessory used to improve details of viewed objects
- Atheist feminism – Branch of feminism that considers women's liberation impossible in religion
- Athens Metro – Rapid transit railway in Athens, Greece
- Atlantic Revolutions – 1765–1838 series of revolutions in the Atlantic World
- Attalid dynasty
- Attempt – Having an intent for and preparing to complete a crime
- Audition – Sample performance by a performer
- Australian literature
- Austrian Holocaust Memorial Service
- Austrian colonial policy – Colonial attempts by Austria
- Austrian literature
- Austro-Hungarian entry into World War I
- Authentication (law)
- Automatic generation control – System adjusting the output of electric generators
- Automotive design – Process of developing the design of motor vehicles
- Availability factor – A power plant's electricity production divided by time
- Avar language – Northeast Caucasian language of the Avars of Dagestan, North Caucasus
- Aviation fuel – Fuel used to power aircraft
- Away in a Manger – Late nineteenth century Christmas carol
- Axiom schema – Short notation for a set of statements that are taken to be true
- BEST theorem – Formula used in graph theory
- Babbling – Stage in child development and language acquisition
- Bacchus and Ariadne – Painting by Titian
- Backfeeding – Reversed flow of electricity
- Background music – Music that deliberately establishes mood
- Backup software – Computer programs used to perform backup
- Baladi – Egyptian dance
- Bali Kingdom – Series of kingdoms in Bali, Indonesia
- Balkans campaign (World War II) – Part of World War II
- Ballades (Chopin) – Piano pieces by Chopin
- Ballet technique – Principles of body movement and form in ballet
- Ballets Russes – Itinerant ballet company (1909–1929)
- Banality (sculpture series) – Sculpture series by Jeff Koons
- Bank teller – Customer-facing bank employee
- Banpo Bridge
- Bar (music) – Segment of time corresponding to a specific number of beats
- Bar council – Professional body of barristers
- Barbecue grill – Device for barbecueing or grilling
- Baroda State – Princely state of India (1721–1949)
- Basal shoot – Shoot growing from an adventitious bud
- Baseball cap – Type of soft, billed hat
- Bass violin – Musical instrument
- Battery (tort) – Tort of contact
- Battle of Caporetto – 1917 battle on the Italian front of World War I
- Battle of Ipsus – Battle in 301 BC that ended the Fourth War of the Diadochi
- Battle of Myeongnyang – 1597 naval battle between the Joseon kingdom of Korea and feudal Japan
- Battle of Oudenarde – Battle in the War of the Spanish Succession
- Battle of Sirte (2011) – 2011 final battle of the First Libyan Civil War
- Battle of Talas – Part of the Muslim conquest of Transoxiana
- Battle of the sexes (game theory) – Two-player coordination game in game theory
- Bayside Shakedown – 1997 Japanese police television series
- Belgian literature
- Belvedere, Vienna – Historic building complex in Vienna, Austria
- Bending (metalworking) – Metalworking to produce a V-, U- or channel shape
- Beneficial organism – Organism that is beneficial for soil health
- Beneficiary (trust) – Person(s) entitled to the benefit of a trust arrangement
- Benefits Supervisor Sleeping – 1995 painting by Lucian Freud
- Berber music – Musical culture of the Berber ethnic groups
- Berlin State Library – State library in Germany
- Beshbarmak – Central Asian noodle dish
- Bhopal State – Islamic principality in India (1708–1949)
- Bibracte – Gallic fortified town and capital of the Aedui
- Bicycle boulevard – Street designed as a bicycle route
- Bicycle lane
- Bicycle parking rack – Device used to park bicycles, not to be confused with a kick stand
- Binary file – Non-human-readable computer file encoded in binary form
- Binomial (polynomial) – In mathematics, a polynomial with two terms
- Binomial series – Mathematical series
- Biochemical engineering – Manufacturing by chemical reactions of biological organisms
- Biochip – Substrates performing biochemical reactions
- Biopharmaceutical – Drug made from biological source
- Bioreactor – System that supports a biologically active environment
- Bioremediation – Process used to treat contaminated media such as water and soil
- Bird in Space – Sculpture by Constantin Brâncuși
- Birth order – Sequence in which children are born into a family
- Bishwa Ijtema – Worldwide Muslim gathering in Bangladesh
- Bizimkiler – Turkish television comedy, 1989 to 2002
- Black War – Period of violent conflict between British colonists and Aboriginal Australians in Tasmania
- Blossom algorithm – Algorithm for finding max graph matchings
- Blum axioms – Axioms in computational complexity theory
- Bodhicitta – Concept in Buddhism
- Body armor – Protective clothing; armor worn on the body
- Bolo tie – Type of necktie
- Bolshoi Ballet – Ballet company based at the Bolshoi Theatre in Russia
- Bolster – Long narrow pillow or cushion
- Bolívar's campaign to liberate New Granada – Military campaign in Venezuelan War of Independence (1819–1820)
- Bond market – Financial market where participants can issue new debt or buy and sell debt securities
- Bone carving – Art, tools, and goods carved from bone
- Book of Documents – One of the Five Classics of ancient Chinese literature
- Book of Taliesin – Medieval Welsh manuscript
- Book of the Civilized Man – 13th century English book of manners
- Bracelet – Jewelry worn around the wrist
- Bridge to Terabithia (novel) – 1977 children's novel by Katherine Paterson
- British Western Pacific Territories – Colonial entity
- Buddha-nature – Buddhist philosophical concept
- Buddhist architecture – Style of building
- Buddhist art – Artistic practices influenced by Buddhism
- Buddhist councils – Convention of Buddhist monastic leaders
- Buddhist monasticism – Buddhist community (sangha) principles
- Buddhist music – Music genre
- Budj Bim – Mountain in Victoria, Australia
- Building design – Planning and specifications for construction
- Bulgarian–Ottoman wars – 1345 – July 1393 conflict between the Second Bulgarian Empire and the Ottoman Empire
- Bullion coin – Type of coin struck from precious metal
- Buried Child – 1978 play by Sam Shepard
- Burke and Wills expedition – Australian exploration expedition (1860–61)
- Burnishing (pottery) – To polish the surface of a ceramic vessel
- Burst mode (weapons) – Automatic firing mode
- Business journalism – Branch of journalism
- Business networking – Sharing of information or services between people, companies or groups
- Butsudan – Shrine commonly found in temples and homes in Japanese Buddhist cultures
- Butter knife – Table knife used to spread butter
- Butuan (historical polity) – Precolonial Philippine polity
- Buzz cut – Variety of short hairstyles
- Byway (road) – UK track more minor than a road
- CRRC – Chinese rolling stock manufacturer
- Cage (graph theory) – Regular graph with fewest possible nodes for its girth
- Cahora Bassa – Reservoir in Mozambique
- Callanish Stones – Neolithic standing stones in the Scottish Outer Hebrides
- Calling convention – Ways subroutines get called in computers
- Camptown Races – 1850 minstrel song by Stephen Foster
- Candy bar – Sweet confectionery in the shape of a bar
- Cantilever bridge – Bridge built using cantilevers
- Capital appreciation – Increase of value of finance over time
- Capital gain – Profit from a sale of a capital asset
- Capital punishment debate
- Capitalism and Freedom – 1962 book by Milton Friedman
- Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy – 1942 book by Joseph Schumpeter
- Caracas Metro – Rapid transit system in Venezuela
- Card manipulation – Branch of magical illusion that deals with sleight of hand involving playing cards
- Cardioid – Type of plane curve
- Carol of the Bells – Christmas carol
- Carolingian art – Art of the Frankish empire, ca. 780–900
- Cash flow statement – Financial statement
- Cassegrain reflector – Combination of concave and convex mirrors
- Cassiopeia (mother of Andromeda) – Figure in Greek mythology
- Cat meat – Meat from domestic cats for human consumption
- Cathedral-Basilica of Our Lady of the Pillar – Catholic church in Zaragoza, Spain
- Cayley graph – Graph defined from a mathematical group
- Cello Concerto (Elgar) – Musical work by Edward Elgar
- Central African Republic Bush War – Civil war, 2004–2007
- Central Daily News – 1928–2006 official newspaper of the Kuomintang
- Centrist Democrat International – Political international
- Ceramic capacitor – Fixed-value capacitor using ceramic
- Ceramic glaze – Fused coating on ceramic objects
- Chain rule for Kolmogorov complexity – Lower bound for size of software program
- Change of variables (PDE) – Technique in partial differential evaluation
- Characterization – Representation of persons in narrative and dramatic works of art
- Charles I in Three Positions – Painting by Anthony van Dyck
- Charter 08 – 2008 Chinese dissident manifesto
- Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union – Group of rights of the European Union
- Chattanooga campaign – 1863 series of battles of the American Civil War
- Chemical reaction engineering – Subfield of chemical engineering
- Chemosterilant – Class of chemical compound
- Chengyang Bridge – Covered bridge in Guangxi, China
- Chesapeake Bay Bridge–Tunnel – Bridge–tunnel spanning the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay in Virginia
- Chesed – Hebrew word referring to love or kindness
- Chespirito (TV series) – Mexican comedy show
- Chiang Hung – Shan state under Burma and China (1180–1950)
- Chicano Movement – Social and political movement combating racism in the United States
- Chichu Art Museum – Japanese art museum
- Chick lit – Term for a type of popular young women's fiction
- Children's music – Music mainly intended for children
- Chilean National Museum of Fine Arts – Chilean art museum
- Chimú culture
- Chinampa – Type of Mesoamerican agriculture
- Chinchorro culture – Preceramic culture
- Chinese Eastern Railway – Historical railroad system in northeast China
- Chinese ceramics – Pottery and porcelain from China
- Chinese garden – Style of garden
- Chinese jade – Chinese jade mined/carved from the Neolithic on
- Chiquititas – Argentine telenovela
- Chogha Zanbil – Ancient Elamite complex in Khuzestan Province, Iran
- Chongqing Rail Transit – Rapid transit system in Chongqing, China
- Chopper (motorcycle) – Type of motorcycle
- Christian deism – Philosophy of religion
- Christian prayer – Activity in Christianity
- Christianization of Kievan Rus'
- Christianization of Scandinavia – Conversion to Christianity of the Scandinavian people
- Christmas elf – Western folklore creature
- Chromatic polynomial – Function in algebraic graph theory
- Chu Ci – Anthology of Chinese poetry
- Church music – Christian music written for performance in church
- Church service – Period of formal public worship
- Chutia Kingdom
- Cigar bar – Establishment for patrons who smoke cigars
- Cinema of Africa
- Cinema of Asia
- Cinema of Egypt
- Cinema of South Africa
- Circulation problem – Generalization of network flow problems
- Civil Procedure Rules – Rules of civil procedure in English and Welsh courts
- Civil death – Loss of all or almost all civil rights
- Clapboard – Building siding of horizontal boards
- Classic book – Exemplary or noteworthy book
- Classic of Mountains and Seas – Chinese classic and compilation of myth
- Classic of Poetry – Collection of ancient Chinese poetry
- Classical Gardens of Suzhou – Chinese Classical garden in Jiangsu province
- Cleveland Institute of Art – Art school in Cleveland, Ohio, US
- Cleveland Institute of Music – Private music conservatory in Ohio, US
- Closed shop – Labour arrangement where the employer must hire unionised members
- Closing argument – Concluding statement of each party's counsel in a trial
- Coat of arms of Andorra
- Coat of arms of Belize – Coat of arms
- Coat of arms of Benin
- Coat of arms of Botswana – Coat of arms
- Coat of arms of Bulgaria
- Coat of arms of Burkina Faso
- Coat of arms of Cameroon
- Coat of arms of Costa Rica
- Coat of arms of Dominica
- Coat of arms of Grenada
- Coat of arms of Guatemala
- Coat of arms of Guyana
- Coat of arms of Haiti
- Coat of arms of Honduras
- Coat of arms of Jordan
- Coat of arms of Kiribati
- Coat of arms of Latvia
- Coat of arms of Lithuania
- Coat of arms of Luxembourg
- Coat of arms of Malawi
- Coat of arms of Mali
- Coat of arms of Malta
- Coat of arms of Nauru
- Coat of arms of Nicaragua
- Coat of arms of Northern Ireland
- Coat of arms of Panama – National coat of arms of Panama
- Coat of arms of Saint Lucia – Coat of arms
- Coat of arms of San Marino
- Coat of arms of Senegal
- Coat of arms of Seychelles – Coat of arms of the Indian Ocean country
- Coat of arms of Solomon Islands
- Coat of arms of Somalia
- Coat of arms of South Sudan
- Coat of arms of Suriname – National coat of arms of Suriname
- Coat of arms of Syria
- Coat of arms of São Tomé and Príncipe
- Coat of arms of Tonga – National seal of Tonga
- Coat of arms of Tuvalu
- Coat of arms of Vanuatu
- Coat of arms of the Dominican Republic
- Coat of arms of the Gambia – National coat of arms
- Coats of arms of the Holy See and Vatican City
- Cocktail dress – Semi-formal dress
- Cocktail sauce – Condiment served usually with seafoods
- Coffee table – Low table meant to be placed in sitting areas
- Coiling (pottery) – Method of making pottery
- Coin grading – Process of determining a collectible coins' visual state
- Coin magic – Use of coins for entertainment
- Collaborative law – Legal process to divorce without litigation
- Colonial architecture – Architectural style in former imperial colonies
- Color motion picture film – Photographic film type
- Coloring book – Book containing line art, to which the user is intended to add color
- Combinatorial principles – Methods used in combinatorics
- Combined cycle power plant – Assembly of heat engines that work in tandem from the same source of heat
- Comedy music – Music genre
- Coming of Age in Samoa – 1928 book by Margaret Mead
- Comma category – Mathematics construct
- Common purpose – Legal term
- Community paper
- Comparability – Property of elements related by inequalities
- Comparative history – Literary genre
- Computable set – Concept in computability theory
- Computably inseparable – Concept in computability theory
- Computer crime
- Computer-aided engineering – Use of software for engineering design and analysis
- Concert dance – Type of dance
- Concert saloon – American form of music hall
- Concerto for Two Violins (Bach) – Concerto by Johann Sebastian Bach
- Concrete slab – Flat, horizontal concrete element of modern buildings
- Conditional factor demands
- Confessions (Augustine) – Autobiographical work by Saint Augustine
- Conflict theories – Perspectives in sociology and social psychology
- Confucian art – Art inspired by Confucius and his teachings
- Connected relation – Property of a relation on a set
- Conserved quantity – Value remaining constant in a dynamical system
- Constitutional Commission – A legal entity approved by a government to review a constitution.
- Constructible function – Concept in complexity theory
- Constructive trust – Type of legal remedy
- Contemporary dance – Genre of dance performance
- Continuous uniform distribution – Uniform distribution on an interval
- Contraposition – Mathematical logic concept
- Contrition – Christian concept of repentance for sins
- Controller (computing)
- Convergence tests – Mathematical criterion about whether a series converges
- Convergent series – Mathematical series with a finite sum
- Conversion (law) – Property tort
- Convertible bond – Type of bond
- Coplanarity – Geometric property of objects being in the same plane
- Coptic history – Aspect of the history of Egypt focusing on the history of the Copts
- Corazón salvaje (1993 TV series)
- Corn harvester – Machine used to harvest corn
- Corporate bond – Bond issued by a corporation
- Corporate manslaughter – Culpable conduct within a company that leads to a person's death
- Corporate tax – Tax on corporations
- Corps de ballet – Group of dancers who are not soloists
- Cost curve – Graph used in economics
- Costume design – Creation of clothing from an aesthetic standpoint
- Cottonseed oil – Cooking oil
- Court reporter – Person who records live court testimony
- Coxeter graph – Cubic graph with 28 vertices and 42 edges
- Crate – Large shipping container
- Crib talk – Pre-sleep monologue made by young children while in bed
- Critical point (mathematics) – Point where the derivative of a function is zero
- Crossing number (graph theory) – Fewest edge crossings in drawing of a graph
- Crossing number inequality – Drawings of dense graphs have many crossings
- Cry, the Beloved Country – 1948 novel by Alan Paton
- Crème fraîche – Soured cream dairy product
- Crêpe – Thin pancake in French cuisine
- Csárdás (Monti) – 1904 concert piece written by Vittorio Monti
- Cuban cuisine – Blend of African, Spanish and other Caribbean cuisine
- Cuban law
- Cufflink – Items of jewelry
- Cultural emphasis
- Cultural history – Study of cultural activity and evolution of traditions over time
- Culture of Buddhism – Cultural elements in Buddhism
- Culture of North America
- Culture of South America
- Cumania – Turkic confederation (10th century – 1241)
- Cured fish – Fish subjected to fermentation, pickling or smoking
- Currency band
- Currency converter
- Currency packaging – Methods of grouping cash for transfer and storage
- Cut of beef – Sections of cattle
- Cutlet – Food (often sliced meat)
- Cycle track – Cycleway between a road and sidewalk, protected by barriers
- Cædmon's Hymn – Old English poem composed 658 to 680
- Dae Jang Geum
- Dairy farming – Long-term production of milk
- Dance (Matisse) – 1910 painting made by Henri Matisse
- Dances in Iran
- Danish literature
- Daozang – Collection of Taoist texts
- Daredevils of Sassoun – Armenian epic poem
- Dark retreat – Tibetan Buddhism advanced practice
- Dashakumaracharita – Sanskrit prose romance
- De Oratore – Dialogue by Cicero, 55BCE
- Dead bolt
- Declaration of Human Duties and Responsibilities
- Declaration of Interdependence
- Degree matrix – Type of matrix in algebraic graph theory
- Delphi (software) – General-purpose programming language and a software product
- Demons (Dostoevsky novel) – 1871 Russian-language book
- Department of motor vehicles – Government agency
- Der Rosenkavalier – Comic opera in three acts by Richard Strauss
- Des racines et des ailes – French television program
- Desert farming – Practice of developing agriculture in deserts
- Deskilling
- Dhoop Kinare – Pakistani television series
- Diaphragm (birth control) – Cervical barrier type of birth control
- Digambara – One of the two major schools of Jainism
- Digital humanities – Area of scholarly activity
- Digital painting – Type of art created using computers
- Digital rights – Type of human and legal rights
- Dilmun – Ancient Arabic civilization
- Dime museum – 19th-c. centers for the working class
- Diplomatic rank – System of professional and social rank
- Directional derivative – Instantaneous rate of change of the function
- Dirichlet character – Complex-valued arithmetic function
- Dirt road – Unpaved road made from the land's native material
- Discretionary trust – Trust in which the beneficiaries and their entitlements are not fixed
- Divergent series – Infinite series that is not convergent
- Doctrine of the Mean – Central doctrine of Confucianism
- Double fisherman's knot – Type of knot
- Dough – Paste used in cooking
- Downtown no Gaki no Tsukai ya Arahende!! – Japanese television series
- Draconian constitution – Law code in Ancient Greece
- Dress shoe – Shoe worn for formal or business dress
- Dried fish – Fish preserved by drying
- Droop speed control – Control mode for AC power generators
- Drought tolerance – Ability of a plant to withstand dry conditions
- Dry roasting – Food preparation method
- Duality (order theory) – Term in the mathematical area of order theory
- Dutch Ceylon – Former colony in Sri Lanka (1640–1796)
- Dynamic demand (electric power) – Technology to support power grid demand response
- Dzungar genocide – Genocide of the Mongol Dzungar people
- Dürer graph – Graph with a triangular truncated trapezohedron as its skeleton
- EHLLAPI
- Early Dynastic Period (Egypt) – Era immediately following the unification of Upper and Lower Egypt (c. 3150 BC – c. 2686 BC)
- Early Dynastic Period (Mesopotamia) – Archaeological culture of Mesopotamia
- Early history of Tonga – Historical period from 700BCE- 1200AD in Tonga
- Early modern literature – 16th–early 18th-century literature
- Earth-leakage circuit breaker – Electrical safety device
- Easter basket – Traditional basket used at Easter
- Easter traditions – Traditions of the Easter holiday
- Eastern Ganga dynasty – Medieval era Indian royal Hindu dynasty
- Eclogues – Poem collection by Virgil
- Economic dispatch
- Economic torts – Types of torts
- Economic warfare – Operations aimed at degrading an opponent's ability to sustain their economic health
- Economy rice – Type of food accompanied by rice
- Ecuadorian War of Independence – 1809–1822 armed conflict in Ecuador
- Edge contraction – Deleting a graph edge and merging its nodes
- Edge cover – Subset of a graph's edges, to which every node is incident to at least one
- Edge of chaos – Transition space between order and disorder
- Eel as food – None
- Effelsberg 100-m Radio Telescope – Radio telescope in Bad Münstereifel, Germany
- Ekistics – Science of human settlements
- El Ferdan Railway Bridge
- Elamite language – Extinct language of the ancient Elamites of Iran
- Electorate of Trier – State of the Holy Roman Empire (898–1801)
- Electric power quality – Measurement of power meeting specifications
- Electric power system – Network of electrical component deployed to generate, transmit & distribute electricity
- Electrical substation
- Electrolytic capacitor – Type of capacitor
- Electronic media – Media that require electronics or electromechanical means to be accessed by the audience
- Electronic-warfare aircraft – Military aircraft utilized in electronic warfare
- Elementary equivalence – Concept in model theory
- Elizabeth Bennet – Fictional character from Pride and Prejudice
- Ellipsoid method – Iterative method for minimizing convex functions
- Elliptic operator – Type of differential operator
- Emblem of Djibouti
- Emblem of Kuwait
- Emblem of Mozambique
- Emblem of Papua New Guinea
- Emblem of Qatar
- Emblem of Sudan
- Enamel paint – Paint with a glossy finish that dries hard
- Energy engineering – Broad field of engineering dealing with energy
- Energy return on investment – Ratio of usable energy from a resource
- Engineering design process – Factors that influence engineering design process
- Engineering economics – Subset of economics
- Engineering management – Overview of management in engineering
- Engineering optimization – Techniques for optimization
- Engineering research – Field of research
- Engineering studies – Academic field
- Entertainment journalism
- Environmental biotechnology – Biotechnology applied to the natural environment
- Environmental communication – Type of communication
- Environmental crime – Illegal act which directly harms the environment
- Environmental impact of agriculture – Agricultural and environmental issues
- Environmental philosophy – Branch of philosophy
- Epic of King Gesar – East and Central Asian epic cycle
- Epic of Sundiata – Epic poem of the Malinke culture
- Equestrian statue of Gattamelata – Sculpture by Donatello in Padua, Italy
- Eraser – Stationery item used for erasing marks on paper
- Essentially contested concept – Problem in philosophy
- Estate in land
- Etruscan art – Art of the ancient Etruscan civilization
- Eurasian Economic Community – Regional economic organisation
- European Arrest Warrant – Form of extradition in the EU
- European land exploration of Australia
- Euthenics – Study of improving living conditions to increase well-being
- Ewha Womans University – Private women's university in central Seoul, South Korea
- Exit interview – Survey conducted with an individual leaving an organisation
- Expansion path
- Expressionist dance – Form of dance focused on expression of feelings
- Expressionist music – Movement in Western music
- Extension (music)
- Extensive reading – Reading longer, easier texts for extended periods of time
- Extensive-form game – Wide-ranging representation of a game in game theory
- Factional violence in Libya (2011–2014) – Period of violence in Libya following the overthrow of Gaddafi
- Factorial experiment – Experimental design in statistics
- Family Group (Moore) – Sculpture series by Henry Moore
- Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis – 1910 composition by Ralph Vaughan Williams
- Fantasy fandom – Aspect of fandom
- Feasibility study – Assessment of the practicality of a project or system
- Feasible region – Mathematical constraints that define ways of finding the best solution
- Featherbedding – Employment practice of overhiring workers
- Feminist theory – Extension of feminism into theoretical, fictional, or philosophical discourse
- Ficciones – Book by Jorge Luis Borges
- Fifty Fifty (Pakistani TV series)
- Fiji National University
- Filing (law)
- Final clause – Dependent adverbial clause expressing purpose
- Financial accounting – Field of accounting
- Financial crime – Crime against property
- Finnish literature
- Fire brick – Building material
- First Intermediate Period of Egypt – Era of Ancient Egyptian history
- Firstborn – Eldest child
- Fish meal – Commercial product made from fish to feed farm animals
- Fish products – Food product produced from fish
- Fitzwilliam Sonatas – Sonatas by Thurston Dart, based on works by Handel
- Five Hegemons – Historical Chinese rulers
- Five-star rank – Senior military rank used by some nations' armed forces
- Fixed income – Type of investment
- Flag of Nigeria – National flag
- Flambé – Cooking procedure
- Flatbed truck – Type of truck
- Flight jacket – Casual jacket originally worn by aviators
- Flip-flop (electronics) – Electronic circuit with two stable states
- Floor plan – Architectural diagram showing interior layout of a building
- Flop Show
- Floral design – Artistic design of flowers and plants for decoration
- Flow (mathematics) – Motion of particles in a fluid
- Flow network – Directed graph where edges have a capacity
- Fluency – Ability to deliver information quickly and correctly
- Flying buttress – Form of buttress
- Flying junction – Type of railway junction
- Food court – Indoor plaza for self-serve dinner
- Food history – None
- Foreign worker – Person working in a country where they do not have citizenship
- Forensic linguistics – Application of linguistics to forensics
- Forgetful functor – Concept in category theory
- Formatted text – Digital text which has styling information beyond minimal semantic elements
- Fortition – Consonantal change
- Fortress Besieged – 1947 novel by Qian Zhongshu
- Four Tank-Men and a Dog – 1960s Polish television series
- Fractional factorial design – Statistical experimental design approach
- Franz Mayer Museum – Art museum in Mexico City, Mexico
- Free Speech Movement – 1964–65 acts of civil disobedience by students of UC Berkeley, California
- Free company – Late medieval army of independent mercenaries
- Free dance – 20th-century dance form
- Frequentist inference – Probability Theory
- Freshwater prawn farming – Aquaculture of shrimp or prawns
- Fried egg – Cooked dish made from one or more eggs
- Fringe benefits tax
- From Here to Eternity (novel) – 1951 novel by James Jones
- Fulani War
- Fungicide – Chemical compounds used to kill fungi
- Fungiculture – Commercial cultivation of fungi
- Funnelbeaker culture – North-central European culture around 4300–2800 BCE
- Fur clothing – Clothing made of furry animal hides
- Future interest – Right to property taking effect later