User:GhostInTheMachine/SD3
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Level 5 Vital articles — N–Z
- Nagoya Municipal Subway – Rapid transit system in Nagoya, Japan
- Nagoya University – National university in Nagoya, Japan
- Nasi lemak – Traditional Malay breakfast item
- National Library of Israel – Jewish heritage library in Jerusalem
- National Library of Sweden – Sweden's national library
- National Museum (Prague) – Czech museum institution
- National Museum of Australia – Museum in Canberra, Australia
- National Museum of Ghana – Museum in Accra, Ghana
- National Museum of Singapore – National museum of Singapore
- National Technical Museum (Prague) – Czech technology museum
- National emblem of East Timor
- Nautilus (photograph) – 1927 photograph by Edward Weston
- Ndonga dialect
- Needs analysis
- Negative and positive rights – Rights that oblige either inaction or action
- Network media – Communication channels used to connect nodes on a computer network
- New Criticism – Formalist movement in literary theory
- New Earth (Christianity) – Doctrine of Christian eschatology
- New Haven Colony – English colony in North America between 1637 and 1664
- New London Bridge
- New Songs from the Jade Terrace – Anthology of early medieval Chinese poetry
- News council – Organization to look into complaints about journalism
- News values – Criteria that influence the selection of events as published news
- Newtonian telescope – Type of reflecting telescope
- Nine lemma – Category theory lemma about commutative diagrams
- Nineteenth-century theatre – 19th-century European and US theatre culture
- Nivelle offensive – Franco-British operation in First World War
- Nominalization – Grammatical formation of nouns from other types of words
- Non-Violence (sculpture) – Sculpture series by Carl Fredrik Reuterswärd
- Nonchord tone – Type of musical note
- Norfolk four-course system – Method of crop rotation
- Norm (philosophy) – Sentences used to effect an action
- Normal-form game – Representation of a game in game theory
- Northern Ndebele language – Bantu language of Zimbabwe and Botswana
- Norwegian Wood (novel) – 1987 novel by Haruki Murakami
- Nowhere-zero flow – Concept in graph theory
- Nuclear testing at Bikini Atoll – US nuclear testing on Bikini Atoll in the Marshall Islands
- Numerical methods for partial differential equations – Branch of numerical analysis
- Numerical relay – System using algorithmic detection of electrical faults
- Nuosu language – Prestige language of China's Yi people
- Nuper rosarum flores – Motet by Guillaume Du Fay
- Nutrient management – Management of nutrients in agriculture
- Occupational injury – Bodily damage resulting from working
- Oceanian culture
- Odes (Horace) – Latin poetry collection
- Of Human Bondage – 1915 novel by William Somerset Maugham
- Offer and acceptance – Components of a legally-binding contract
- Official script
- Offshore aquaculture – Fish farms in waters some distance away from the coast
- Old media – Mass media institutions before the Digital Age
- Omani Empire – Omani maritime empire (1696–1856)
- Omeros – 1990 epic poem by Derek Walcott
- On Liberty – Book by John Stuart Mill
- One-factor-at-a-time method – Method of designing experiments
- One-piece swimsuit – Swimwear worn mainly by women and girls
- Online shopping – Form of electronic commerce
- Only child – Child without siblings
- Opening statement – Beginning statement in a court case
- Operation Enduring Freedom – Philippines – Military operation
- Operation Linda Nchi – Kenyan military operation (2011–2012)
- Opposite category – Mathematical category formed by reversing morphisms
- Oral exam – Educational assessment where questions are asked and answered verbally
- Order of Saint John (Bailiwick of Brandenburg) – German Protestant branch of the Knights Hospitaller
- Organ printing – Method of creating artificial organs
- Organic aquaculture – Holistic method for farming marine species
- Oriental Daily News – Chinese newspaper in Hong Kong
- Orlando: A Biography – 1928 novel by Virginia Woolf
- Ostrogothic Kingdom – 493–553 kingdom centered in Italy
- Ottoman entry into World War I – Entrance of the Ottoman Empire into the First World War
- Ottoman–Persian Wars – Series of wars through the 16th to 19th centuries
- Ottonian art – Style in pre-Romanesque German art
- Oudh State – Polity in the Awadh region of North India (1732–1856)
- Ouest-France – French newspaper
- Out (magazine) – American LGBTQ magazine
- Ovambo language – Bantu language
- Panchala
- Panorama (art)
- Papier-mâché – Paper-based construction material
- Parallel (geometry) – Relation used in geometry
- Parent-in-law – Parent of one's spouse
- Parent–teacher conference – Short meeting between parents and teachers
- Paris Charter – 1990 non-binding European and North American political agreement
- Parkinson (TV series) – British television chat show (1971–2007)
- Parody music – Composition technique
- Partial permutation – Selection in a particular order
- Partita for Violin No. 2 (Bach) – Composition for violin by Johan Sebastian Bach
- Partners (statue) – 1993 copper statue by Blaine Gibson
- Party-directed mediation – Form of conflict resolution
- Parzival – 13th-century Arthurian romance by Wolfram von Eschenbach
- Pastry fork – Eating utensil
- Patent office – Government agency that issues patents
- Path (graph theory) – Sequence of edges which join a sequence of nodes on a given graph
- Patio – Outdoor, typically paved, space adjoining a residence or other structure
- Peak demand – Highest power demand on a grid in a specified period
- Pedro Páramo – 1955 novel by Juan Rulfo
- Penanggalan – Nocturnal vampiric entity featured in Malay ghost myths
- Penetrator (aircraft) – Long-range bomber aircraft
- Peninsular Arabic – Varieties of Arabic of the Arabian Peninsula
- Pennsylvania State University – Public university in State College, Pennsylvania, US
- Penology – Subfield of criminology
- People Are Funny – US radio and television game show (1942–1960)
- People's Liberation Army Daily – People's Liberation Army newspaper
- Pepper No. 30 – Photograph by Edward Weston
- Peranakan Museum – Museum in Singapore
- Persian alphabet – Writing system used for the Persian language
- Persian traditional music – Aspect of Iranian culture
- Petrushka (ballet) – 1911 ballet by Igor Stravinsky
- Petty kingdoms of Norway – Entities from which the later Kingdom of Norway was founded
- Phaedrus (dialogue) – Work by Plato
- Pharmaceutical engineering – Branch of engineering regarding drugs
- Phowa – Religious practice
- Phèdre – 1677 tragedy by Racine
- Piano Concerto No. 1 (Chopin) – Piano concerto by Frédéric Chopin
- Picard theorem – Theorem about the range of an analytic function
- Picketing – Form of protest, usually labor action
- Piecewise
- Pigtail – Hairstyle gathering hair at the sides of the head
- Pindar's First Olympian Ode
- Pippi Longstocking (novel) – 1945 children's book by Astrid Lindgren
- Planarization – Technique for drawing non-planar graphs
- Plaster of Paris
- Plastic mulch – Plastic film used in the role of mulch
- Plastics engineering
- Platform of European Memory and Conscience – EU project to remember totalitarian governments
- Pliers – Hand tool
- Plus belle la vie – French television soap opera
- Pointed set – Basic concept in set theory
- Pole Chudes
- Polish population transfers (1944–1946) – Post WWII resettlement
- Political communication – Field of study
- Politics of Denmark
- Pollination management – Horticultural practices to enhance pollination
- Polycentric law – Theoretical legal structure
- Polyculture – Growing multiple crops together in agriculture
- Polymer engineering – Engineering field studying polymer materials
- Pont de la Concorde (Paris) – Bridge in Paris, France
- Ponte Sant'Angelo – Ancient bridge in Rome
- Ponytail – Hairstyle gathering hair at the back of the head
- Population history of Indigenous peoples of the Americas
- Portrait miniature – Miniature portrait painting
- Portuguese Architecture
- Portuguese literature
- Portuguese–Mamluk naval war
- Possession of stolen goods – Category of crime
- Post's theorem – Theorem in computability theory
- Postal history – Study of postal systems
- Postharvest – Stage of crop production immediately after harvest
- Postmodernist film – Film genre
- Pot pie – Type of meat pie
- Potential theory – Harmonic functions as solutions to Laplace's equation
- Power engineering – Subfield of electrical engineering
- Power system protection – Branch of electrical power engineering
- Power-flow study – Numerical analysis of electric power flow
- Pre-Columbian art – Art of the Pre-Columbian civilizations
- Precast concrete – Construction material
- Precipitation hardening – Heat treatment technique used to increase the yield strength of malleable materials
- Predicted impact of Brexit – Predicted long-term effects of Brexit
- Prehistoric music – Music produced in preliterate cultures (prehistory)
- Prehistoric technology – Technology that predates recorded history
- Prenex normal form – Formalism of first-order logic
- Primal cut – Piece of meat initially separated during butchering
- Prince Charming – A theme in storytelling, often used as a stock character
- Principle of explosion – Theorem in formal logic
- Print syndication – Sale of news items to other news outlets
- Prior probability – Distribution of an uncertain quantity
- Prison rape – Forced sexual intercourse in prison
- Proactive law – 1990s movement in legal theory
- Problem statement – Description of an issue
- Process engineering – Study of making products from raw materials
- Proclamation of the Republic (Brazil) – Military coup d'état that established the First Brazilian Republic on 15 November 1889
- Profit sharing – Plan where employees share in profits
- Propellant – Chemical substance used for propulsion
- Property crime – Criminal acts against private property
- Prosecutor – Legal profession
- Proslogion – Prayer by Saint Anselm of Canterbury
- Protagoras (dialogue) – Platonic dialogue
- Protective relay – Relay device designed to trip a circuit breaker when a fault is detected
- Province of Maine – 17th century English colonies in North America
- Provisions of Oxford – England's written constitution of 1258
- Prélude à l'après-midi d'un faune – Symphonic poem by Claude Debussy
- Public liability – Law of tort which focuses on civil wrongs
- Pump organ – Free-reed organ musical instrument
- Pushyabhuti dynasty – Classical Indian dynasty (c.500–647 CE)
- Push–relabel maximum flow algorithm – Algorithm in mathematical optimization
- Qi (state) – Zhou dynasty Chinese state (1046–221 BCE)
- Qin's wars of unification – Qin campaigns to conquer all of China (230–221 BC)
- Quails as food
- Quan Tangshi
- Quantifier (logic) – Mathematical use of "for all" and "there exists"
- Quantifier elimination – Simplification technique in mathematical logic
- Quantitative linguistics – Subdiscipline of mathematical linguistics
- Quantum cohomology – Concept in algebraic geometry
- Quickstep – Ballroom dance
- Qutb Shahi dynasty
- Raceway (aquaculture) – Artificial channel used in aquaculture
- Radetzky March – 1848 march by Johann Strauss Sr.
- Radical media – Journalistic media that disperse action-oriented political agendas
- Rainbow matching – Edge-colored graph matching where all edges have distinct colors
- Rainfed agriculture – Type of farming that uses rain for water
- Ramayan (1987 TV series) – Indian epic television series
- Ramzor – Israeli sitcom, 2008–2014
- Rankine cycle – Model that is used to predict the performance of steam turbine systems
- Rat bike – Type of motorcycle
- Reaper-binder – Harvesting machine
- Record sealing – Legal procedure
- Recruitment – Process of attracting, selecting and appointing candidates to a job or other organization
- Reduct – Omission of operations and relations of a structure
- Refracting telescope – Type of optical telescope
- Register (music) – Musical terminology referring to range or pitch
- Regular dodecahedron – Convex polyhedron with 12 regular pentagonal faces
- Regulatory agency – Type of government institution
- Regulatory compliance – Organizational efforts to comply with relevant laws, policies, and regulations
- Rehearsal – Practice performance
- Related rates – Problems that make use of the relations to rates of change
- Renaissance architecture in Central Europe
- Renaissance architecture in Central and Eastern Europe – Regional Architecture
- Renaissance literature – European literature influenced by the Renaissance
- Renaissance technology – Technology during the Renaissance era
- Repeal – Removal or reversal of a law
- Repeated game – Game that repeats a base game
- Repentance (Christianity)
- Repowering – Process of replacing older power stations with newer ones
- Reproductive cloning
- Residual media – Old media forms retaining cultural value
- Reuben sandwich – Type of sandwich with meat and sauerkraut
- Reusability – Use of existing assets in software development
- Revenue service – Type of government agency
- Revivalism (architecture) – Architectural styles that echo the style of a previous architectural era
- Rhapsody (music) – One-movement musical work
- Rhein II – Photograph by Andreas Gurksy
- Rhetoric (Aristotle) – Work of literature by Aristotle
- Rialto Bridge – Bridge in Venice, Italy
- Rickshaw Boy – 1937 novel by Lao She
- Rigid airship – Airship in which the envelope is supported by a framework
- Rigpa – Concept within Tibetan Buddhism
- Ring (jewellery) – Round band worn as ornamental jewellery
- Rio de Janeiro Metro – Rapid transit network serving Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
- Rise of nationalism in Europe – Part of the history of Europe
- Rise of nationalism in the Ottoman Empire – Overview of the rise of nationalism in the Ottoman Empire
- Risk analysis (engineering)
- Rock musical – Musical theatre work with rock music
- Roller (agricultural tool) – Tool for flattening land or breaking up soil
- Roman conquest of the Iberian Peninsula
- Romanian architecture
- Romanian literature
- Romanticism in science – Intellectual attitude toward science influenced by Romanticism
- Rosalinda (Mexican TV series) – 1999 Mexican television serial drama
- Rotary switch – Device
- Rotation (mathematics) – Motion of a certain space that preserves at least one point
- Rotisserie – Style of roasting
- Rotterdam Metro – Rapid transit system in Rotterdam, Netherlands
- Royal Alberta Museum – History museum in Edmonton, Alberta
- Royal Library, Denmark – National library of Denmark
- Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology – Museum in Drumheller, Alberta, Canada
- Royal coat of arms of Great Britain
- Rule of product – Basic counting principle in mathematics
- Rule of sum
- Rule utilitarianism – Ethical principle; incorporates deontology into greatest-happiness thinking
- Rulemaking – Process by which executive branch agencies create regulations
- Russian entry into World War I
- Russo-Kazan Wars – 1439–1552 wars between Kazan and Russia
- Rūpa – Form of object in Indian philosophy
- SEAC (computer) – First-generation electronic computer built in 1950
- SWAC (computer) – Early electronic digital computer built in 1950
- Sacred space – Locations of religious significance
- Saddle point – Critical point on a surface graph which is not a local extremum
- Sahasranama – Genre of Hindu literature
- Sahelian kingdoms
- Saint Petersburg Metro – Rapid transit system in Russia
- Sakshi (newspaper) – Telgu language newspaper in india
- Salted fish – Fish preserved or cured with salt
- Salting (union organizing) – Labor union tactic
- Samba (Brazilian dance) – Dance of Afro-Brazilian origin
- Samguk yusa – 13th century Korean historical record
- Samjna (concept) – Buddhist term
- Sandglass (TV series) – South Korean television series
- Santa Lucia (song) – Traditional Neapolitan song
- Sao civilisation – Central African civilization
- Sapporo Municipal Subway – Rubber-tyred rail system in Sapporo, Japan
- Sardines as food
- Sasuke (TV series) – Japanese sports entertainment game show
- Saudeleur dynasty – First organized government uniting the people of Pohnpei island
- Saybrook Colony – English colony in North America (1635–1644)
- Saṅkhāra – Buddhist concept of "formations"
- Scheherazade (Rimsky-Korsakov) – Symphonic poem by Rimsky-Korsakov
- Schmidt–Cassegrain telescope – Type of catadioptric telescope
- School violence – Circumstance of violence
- Schubert's song cycles – Group of works
- Science in classical antiquity
- Science in the Age of Enlightenment – Science during the 16th-19th century
- Scivias – 1151–1152 work by Hildegard von Bingen
- Scrunchie – Hair accessory
- Scythia – Region of Eurasia defined in antiquity
- Scythian art
- Seal of the Marshall Islands – Coat of arms of the island nation
- Seaweed farming – Farming of aquatic seaweed
- Second Greek colonisation
- Second Green Revolution – Proposed change in agricultural production
- Second Intermediate Period of Egypt – Period of Ancient Egyptian history (1700–1550 BC)
- Second Ivorian Civil War – Civil War in Ivory Coast from November 2010 to April 2011
- Security guard – Person employed to protect properties or people
- Seikilos epitaph – Oldest surviving complete piece of music
- Selective fire – Firearm adjustment
- Self-Portrait as the Allegory of Painting – Painting by Artemisia Gentileschi
- Self-censorship – Act of censoring or classifying one's own discourse
- Self-portraits by Rembrandt – None
- Semde – Tibetan Buddhist concept
- Semi-automatic firearm – Type of firearm
- Sensō-ji – Buddhist temple in Tokyo, Japan
- Sentimental Education – 1869 French novel
- Separation of church and state in the United States – Political principle in the United States
- Separation of variables – Technique for solving differential equations
- Sequence dance – Type of dance with preset movement pattern
- Serial rapist – Rapist who rapes many people regularly
- Series expansion – Expression of a function as an infinite sum of simpler functions
- Service design – Type of design
- Service economy – Economy mainly driven by sales of services
- Seven Easy Pieces – Performances by artist Marina Abramović
- Seventeen Moments of Spring – Soviet TV series (1973)
- Seventeen tantras – Collection of Dzogchen tantras
- Shanghai Art Museum
- Shared-use path – Pathway for pedestrians and cyclists
- Shchedryk (song) – Traditional song arranged by Mykola Leontovych in 1916
- Sheet metal – Metal formed into thin, flat pieces
- Shen Bao – Newspaper in Shanghai, China
- Shiloh (biblical city) – Ancient Israelite city and sanctuary
- Shotcrete – Concrete or mortar building material
- Shrimp and prawn as food – Crustaceans used for culinary purposes
- Shwedagon Pagoda – Buddhist pagoda in Yangon, Myanmar
- Sibelius Monument (Helsinki)
- Siege of Jerusalem (1187) – Conquest of Jerusalem by the Ayyubids
- Sign (mathematics) – Number property of being positive or negative
- Sign function – Mathematical function returning -1, 0 or 1
- Signature (logic) – Description of non-logical symbols
- Sikh architecture – Style of architecture
- Silage – Fermented fodder preserved by acidification
- Silk Road transmission of Buddhism – Part of the history of Buddhism in Asia
- Silver coin – Form of coinage
- Silver mining – Extraction silver from the ground
- Simchat Torah – Jewish holiday marking the conclusion of public Torah readings
- Sirloin steak – Beef steak cut from the loin
- Six Characters in Search of an Author – 1921 Italian play
- Six Dharmas of Naropa – Set of Tibetan Buddhist tantric practices
- Size – Magnitude or dimension of a thing
- Skew lines – Lines not in the same plane
- Skimmed milk – Milk with all milkfat removed
- Skolem normal form – Formalism of first-order logic
- Slavonic Dances – Orchestral works by Antonín Dvořák
- Sleeping Hermaphroditus – Ancient marble sculpture
- Slipper – Informal footwear
- Smoke and mirrors – Metaphor
- Smother crop – Crop used to smother weeds
- Smudge pot – Oil-burning device used to prevent frost on fruit trees
- Social choice theory – Academic discipline
- Social realism – Art showing conditions of the working class
- Software portability – Ability of a program to run on different platforms with little alteration
- Soil salinity control – Controlling the problem of soil salinity
- Soil steam sterilization – Farming technique that sterilizes soil with steam
- Solar telescope – Telescope used to observe the Sun
- Solid geometry – Field of mathematics dealing with three-dimensional Euclidean spaces
- Somatic fusion – Genetic modification fusing plants into a hybrid
- Sombrero – Traditional Mexican folk hat
- Songket – Traditional Maritime Southeast Asian woven fabric
- Sonnets to Orpheus – Sonnet cycle by Rainer Maria Rilke
- Sources of law – Origin of rules regulating human conduct
- Southern Metropolis Daily – Daily newspaper in Guangzhou city, China
- Southern Weekly – Chinese weekly newspaper
- Soviet Central Asia – Section of Central Asia formerly controlled by the Soviet Union
- Space complexity – Computer memory needed by an algorithm
- Spanish Gothic architecture – Late Medieval Spanish architecture
- Spanish garden – Style of garden or designed landscape
- Speak, Memory – Book by Vladimir Nabokov
- Specific performance – Equitable remedy in contract law
- Splayd – Combination spoon, knife and fork utensil
- Sports drink – Oral electrolytic infusion
- Spread (food) – Food that is spread onto bread
- Sprite (folklore) – Supernatural entity
- Stabat Mater (Pergolesi) – Classical music
- Stable theory – Concerned with the notion of stability in model theory
- Stack interchange – A type of freeway interchange
- Stage hypnosis – Type of hypnosis before an audience
- Staging (theatre, film, television) – Manipulation of a performance space
- Stari Most – Bridge in Mostar, Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Statement of changes in equity
- Stationary point – Zero of the derivative of a function
- Steak tartare – Starter dish composed of finely chopped raw meat
- Stone slab – Flat, thin, and big stone
- Stool (seat) – Seating furniture without backrest and armrest
- Strategic dominance – Quality of a strategy in game theory
- Strategy (game theory) – Complete plan on how a game player will behave in every possible game situation
- Street art – Art that is public and temporary in public spaces
- Street dance – Vernacular dance in an urban context
- String Quartet No. 14 (Beethoven) – Late string quartet by Ludwig van Beethoven
- String Quintet (Schubert) – String quintet composition by Franz Schubert
- String Quintet in E major, Op. 11, No. 5 (Boccherini) – 1775 quintet by Luigi Boccherini
- Study (room) – Type of room in a house
- Substitution (law)
- Successive over-relaxation – Method of solving a linear system of equations
- Sujeo – Korean eating utensils
- Sultanate of Mogadishu – Medieval Somali sultanate
- Sun-dried tomato – Tomatoes which have been dried in the sun
- Sunday magazine – Publication inserted into a Sunday newspaper
- Sunrise (Australian TV program) – Australian breakfast television show
- Sunroom – Room with large glass windows or walls for exposure to sunlight
- Super Commando Dhruva – Indian comic book hero
- Super grid – Wide-area electricity transmission network
- Suprematism – Early-20th-century Russian art movement
- Surety – Promise to assume responsibility for defaulted debt
- Surface mining – Type of mining in which the soil/rock above mineral deposits is removed
- Sutta Piṭaka – Division of the Pali Canon of Theravada Buddhism
- Svasaṃvedana – Buddhist term
- Swather – Harvesting machine
- Swazi language – Bantu language spoken in Eswatini and South Africa
- Swedish literature
- Swiss literature
- Syllabus – Outline and summary of topics to be covered in an education or training course
- Symphony No. 2 (Rachmaninoff) – Symphony in four movements composed by Sergei Rachmaninoff
- Symphony No. 2 (Sibelius) – Symphony in four movements by Jean Sibelius
- Symphony No. 5 (Shostakovich) – 1937 symphony by Dmitri Shostakovich
- Symphony No. 5 (Sibelius) – Symphony in three movements by Jean Sibelius
- Symphony No. 5 (Tchaikovsky) – Symphony by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky
- Symphony No. 7 (Sibelius) – Symphony in one movement by Jean Sibelius
- Symphony No. 8 (Schubert) – 1822 incomplete symphony by Franz Schubert
- Symphony No. 9 (Bruckner) – Symphony by Anton Bruckner
- Symphony No. 9 (Schubert) – Symphony by Franz Schubert
- Syntactic change
- Systemic functional linguistics – Approach that considers language as a social semiotic system
- Systolic geometry – Form of differential geometry
- São Paulo Metro – Rapid transit system in São Paulo, Brazil
- São Paulo Museum of Art – Art museum in São Paulo, Brazil
- T-top – Automobile roof with removable panels
- Table knife – Type of cutlery
- Tactical formation – Arrangement of movable military forces
- Taipei People – Book by Pai Hsien-yung
- Taiyō ni Hoero! – Japanese television series
- Talianki (archaeological site) – Archaeological site in Ukraine
- Tally marks – Numeral form used for counting
- Tang dynasty art – Art of the Tang dynasty
- Taoist diet – None
- Tarumanagara – Former kingdom in Indonesia
- Task (computing) – Unit of execution or work in software
- Tathātā – The true nature of things in Buddhism
- Tawaf
- Tax noncompliance – Range of legal and illegal activities that reduce tax paid
- Tea blending and additives – Blending different teas together
- Technical communication – Field of communication of technical information
- Technology life cycle – Development, ascent, maturity, and decline of new technologies
- Teikei – Japanese community supported agriculture
- Telediario
- Telescope mount – Mechanical structure which supports a telescope
- Television addiction – Proposed addiction model
- Television documentary – Genre of television program
- Television in Argentina
- Television in Canada
- Television in Hong Kong
- Television in Iran
- Television in Israel
- Television in Mexico
- Television in Pakistan
- Television in South Africa
- Television in Thailand
- Television in Turkey
- Television studio – Installation in which video productions take place
- Ten Great Campaigns – 1755–1789 Chinese military campaigns
- Tendon as food – Part used as ingredient in some Asian cuisines
- Tertön – Tibetan Buddhist master
- Textbook – Type of academic study book
- Thaïs (opera) – Opera by Jules Massenet
- The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Nicolaes Tulp – Oil painting by Rembrandt
- The Armed Man – Mass composed by Karl Jenkins
- The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas – 1933 memoir by Gertrude Stein
- The Big Buddha (Hong Kong) – Large bronze statue of Buddha
- The Book of Disquiet – Book by Fernando Pessoa, published in 1982
- The Bronco Buster – 1895 sculpture by Frederic Remington
- The Bund (TV series)
- The Caucasian Chalk Circle – Theatre play by Bertolt Brecht
- The Charterhouse of Parma – Novel by Stendhal
- The Climax (illustration) – Illustration by Aubrey Beardsley
- The Creation (Haydn) – Oratorio by Joseph Haydn
- The Education of Henry Adams – 1907 autobiography by Henry Brooks Adams
- The Elevation of the Cross (Rubens) – Triptych by Peter Paul Rubens
- The Falling Soldier – Photograph by Robert Capa
- The Farm (Miró) – Painting by Joan Miró
- The Great Game
- The Hind and the Panther – 1687 poem by John Dryden
- The History of the Standard Oil Company – 1904 book by Ida Tarbell
- The Joy Luck Club (novel) – 1989 novel written by Amy Tan
- The Last Judgment (Michelangelo) – Sistine Chapel fresco by Michelangelo
- The Last Rose of Summer – Poem by the Irish poet Thomas Moore
- The Last Samurai (novel) – Novel by Helen DeWitt
- The Liberal Imagination – 1950 book by Lionel Trilling
- The Massacre at Chios – Painting by Eugène Delacroix
- The Mature Age – Sculpture by Camille Claudel
- The Moon Represents My Heart – 1977 Song by Teresa Teng
- The Persians – Classical Greek tragedy by Aeschylus
- The Phantom of the Opera (song) – Song composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber
- The Phil Donahue Show – American television talk show
- The Pond—Moonlight – 1904 photograph by Edward Steichen
- The Price Is Right – American television game show
- The Return of the Prodigal Son (Rembrandt) – Painting by Rembrandt
- The Ruins of Athens – Incidental music by Ludwig van Beethoven
- The Rules of Sociological Method – 1895 book by Emile Durkheim
- The Seven Storey Mountain – 1948 autobiography of Thomas Merton
- The Skin of Our Teeth – 1942 play by Thornton Wilder
- The Steerage – 1907 black and white photograph by Alfred Stieglitz
- The System of Nature – 1770 work by Paul-Henri Thiry
- The Tale of Igor's Campaign – 12th century Old East Slavic heroic poem
- The Temple of the Golden Pavilion – Novel by Yukio Mishima
- The Tin Drum – 1959 novel by Günter Grass
- The Travels of Marco Polo – 13th-century travelogue
- The Waves – 1931 novel by Virginia Woolf
- The Woman Warrior – 1976 book by Maxine Hong Kingston
- The Zoological Record – Index of zoological literature
- The cricketers – 1948 painting by Russell Drysdale
- Theatre of Japan
- Theme (narrative) – Central topic, subject, or message within a narrative
- Theoretical philosophy – Branch of philosophy
- Theory (mathematical logic) – Set of sentences in a formal language
- There's No Business Like Show Business – Irving Berling song from Annie Get Your Gun
- Theta role
- Thirty Meter Telescope – Future observatory in the United States
- Three Treasures (Taoism) – Basic virtues in Taoism
- Three-field system – Medieval crop rotation system
- Tibi Dam – 16th-century dam in Valencia, Spain
- Tiger in a Tropical Storm – Painting by Henri Rousseau
- Timeline of aviation
- Timeline of jet power – None
- Timeline of military aviation – None
- Timeline of motor vehicle brands – None
- Timeline of the electric motor
- Timeline of zoology – None
- Tin mining – Process of extracting tin from the ground
- Tirant lo Blanch – Book by Joanot Martorell and Martí Joan de Galba (1490)
- Tivoli circuit – Former Australian theatrical circuit
- Tiwanaku Empire – Pre-Columbian polity in Western Bolivia
- Today Tonight – Australian television program
- Tokyo Medical and Dental University – Former public university in Tokyo, Japan
- Toltec Empire – Mesoamerican empire
- Tonality – Harmonic structure with a central pitch
- Tonglen – Meditation practice of Tibetan Buddhism
- Top (clothing) – Clothing worn on the upper body
- Top Girls – 1982 play by Caryl Churchill
- Torque wrench – Tool used to apply a specific torque
- Total derivative – Type of derivative in mathematics
- Toupée – Hairpiece or partial wig of natural or synthetic hair
- Trade journalism
- Traditional animation – Animation technique in which frames are hand-drawn
- Transitional justice – Measures implemented to respond to large-scale human rights violations
- Transmission of the Greek Classics – Key factor in the development of intellectual life in Western Europe
- Transmission system operator – Energy transporter
- Transparency (human–computer interaction) – Term in human–computer interaction
- Transphonologization
- Transplanter – Agricultural machine
- Transplanting – Gardening technique
- Transportation theory (mathematics) – Study of optimal transportation and allocation of resources
- Travelers' Club
- Treaty of Peace with Italy, 1947
- Trespass to land – Use of land prevented by local property laws
- Triangular array – Concept in mathematics and computing
- Tribute act – Musical act playing the music of a well-known act
- Trinomial – Polynomial that has three terms
- Triptych of the Temptation of St. Anthony – 1501 painting by Hieronymus Bosch
- Troika (dance) – Russian folk dance
- Troilus and Criseyde – 1380s poem by Geoffrey Chaucer
- Tropical horticulture – Branch of horticulture
- Trustee – Person holding a position of trust to a beneficiary
- Truth table – Mathematical table used in logic
- Tsonga language – Bantu language of the Tsonga people of Southern Africa
- Turing's proof – Proof by Alan Turing
- Turkey bacon – Meat prepared from chopped, formed, cured, and smoked turkey
- Twentieth-century theatre
- Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair – 1924 poetry collection by Pablo Neruda
- Twist (dance) – Dance inspired by rock and roll music
- Tyndale Bible – Early Modern English translation of the Bible
- Type (model theory) – Concept in model theory
- Type conversion – Changing an expression from one data type to another
- UMC (company)
- UNIVAC LARC – Livermore Advanced Research Computer
- Ukrainian national revival – Social and political movement in Ukraine
- Undergraduate degree – Degree earned by a person who has completed undergraduate courses
- Undue influence – Seizing control of a person's will for gain
- United Nations Radio – Audio service of the United Nations
- United States Secret Service – U.S. federal law enforcement agency
- United States Tax Court – United States federal tribunal dealing with tax matters
- University of Innsbruck – Public Austrian university
- University of Navarra – Non-profit private pontifical university in Pamplona, Spain
- University of Stuttgart – Public university in Stuttgart, Germany
- Upekṣā – Concept of equanimity in Buddhism
- Urban horticulture – Science of growing plants in urban environments
- Utility pole – Post used by public utilities to support overhead wires and related equipment
- VGA connector – 15-pin video connector
- VGTRK
- Vacation rental – Furnished dwelling for short-term stays
- Valuation (finance) – Process of estimating what something is worth, used in the finance industry
- Variable capacitor – Capacitor whose capacitance can be changed
- Vasco da Gama Bridge – Bridge in Lisbon, Portugal
- Vase – Open container, often used to hold cut flowers
- Vedanā – Buddhist term referring to feelings and sensations
- Vedic chant – Oral tradition of the Vedas
- Veiled Christ – 1753 sculpture by Giuseppe Sanmartino
- Venetian–Genoese wars – Series of territorial conflicts between Genoa and Venice (13th-14th centuries)
- Venison – Deer meat
- Verbotene Liebe – German TV soap opera
- Verdict – Formal finding of fact made by a jury on matters submitted to it by the judge
- Vesti (VGTRK) – Russian TV news program
- Victoria Memorial, London – Public memorial by Thomas Brock
- Vijayanagara – City in Karnataka, India
- Villa Capra "La Rotonda"
- Vinaya Piṭaka – First division of the Tripitaka or Pali Canon of Theravada Buddhism
- Violence against men – Violent acts committed against men
- Violin Concerto (Sibelius) – Concerto in three movements by Jean Sibelius
- Violin Concerto (Tchaikovsky) – 1878 concerto by Pyotr Tchaikovsky
- Virtual power plant – Cloud-based distributed power plant
- Visual language – System of communication using visual elements
- Vizier – High-ranking political advisor or minister
- Vizing's theorem – Theorem on graph edge-coloring
- Voice leading – Decision-making consideration when arranging voices in musical composition
- Voicing (music) – Placement of notes in music
- Voltage regulator – System designed to maintain a constant voltage
- Wait for Me, Daddy – WWII Era photo
- Waiting staff – Service occupation
- Waltharius – Latin epic poem
- War dance – Dance involving mock combat
- War of the Eight Princes – 291–306 AD series of civil wars in the Chinese Jin dynasty
- War of the Genders – 2000 Hong Kong TV sitcom
- Warehouse store – A type of deep discount retailer
- Warsaw Uprising Museum
- Wartime sexual violence – Acts of sexual violence committed by combatants during armed conflict, war or military occupation
- Water torture – Methods of torture using water
- Wattle and daub – Building technique using woven wooden supports packed with clay or mud
- We Wish You a Merry Christmas – English Christmas carol
- Weather radio – Specialized radio receiver for weather forecasts
- Wesfarmers – Australian conglomerate
- Whakairo – Traditional Māori form of art carving
- When the Saints Go Marching In – American gospel hymn
- Where Do We Come From? What Are We? Where Are We Going? – 1897–98 painting by Paul Gauguin
- White meat – Meat which is pale before and after cooking
- White tea – Tea from the Camellia sinensis plant
- Wide Sargasso Sea – 1966 novel by Jean Rhys
- Wild West shows – 1870–1920 traveling vaudeville performances
- Wild man – Mythical figure
- Wine bar – Tavern-like business focusing on selling wine
- Wine glass – Type of glass for drinking wine, most often stemware
- Women of Trachis – Ancient Greek tragedy by Sophocles
- Work song – Piece of music closely connected to a form of work
- Worker and Kolkhoz Woman – 1937 sculpture by Vera Mukhina
- Working set – Set of resources actively used by a process
- Workplace violence – Assault, abuse or threat that occurs in the workplace
- Works and Days – Poem written by the ancient Greek poet Hesiod
- World news – News or journalism covering events in foreign countries
- Wuhan Metro – Rapid transit system for Wuhan
- Wycliffe's Bible – Middle English translations of the Bible
- X-ray astronomy detector
- Ya'rubids – Rulers of Oman between 1624 and 1742
- Yab-Yum – Symbol in Tibetan Buddhist art
- Yahoo! Search
- Yan (state) – Ancient state in northern China (11th century BC – 222 BC)
- Yana (Buddhism) – Method of spiritual practice
- Yard (land) – Land adjacent to buildings
- Yaśodharapura – Second capital of the Khmer Empire
- Yesod – Ninth emanation in Kabbalah
- Yiddish literature
- Yomi – Japanese word for the land of the dead
- Yu Shi – Chinese god of rain
- Yue opera – Chinese opera genre
- Zeno's Conscience – 1923 novel by Italo Svevo
- Zhitro – Teachings in Tibetan Buddhism and Bon