Century Dictionary 03 DROOP-GYV PDF
Century Dictionary 03 DROOP-GYV PDF
Century Dictionary 03 DROOP-GYV PDF
of tbe
^niversit^ of Toronto
bB
Professor Keys
THE
CENTURY DICTIONARY
AND /"^ ^m^ii/
CYCLOPEDIA
A WORK OF UNIVERSAL REFERENCE
IN ALL [Departments of knowledge
IN TEN VOLUMES
VOLUME III
PUBLISHED BY
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historical, and practical information in addition to an unrivaled wealth of purely philological material
that the same encyclopedic method is applied to proper names —
names of persons, places, characters in
fiction, books — in short, of everything to which a name is given; and that in the Atlas geographical
names, and much besides, are exhibited with a completeness and serviceableness seldom equaled. Of
The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia as a whole, therefore, it may be said that it is in its own field
the most complete presentation of human knowledge —
scientific, historical, and practical —that exists.
Moreover, the method of distributing this encyclopedic material under a large number of headings,
which has been followed throughout, makes each item of this great store of information far more acces-
sible than in works in which a different system is adopted.
The whole represents fifteen years of labor. The first edition of The Century Dictionary was com-
pleted in 1891, and that of TheCentury Cyclopedia of Names in 1894. During the years that have elapsed
since those dates each of these works has been subjected to repeated careful revisions, in order to include
the latest information, and the results of this scrutiny are comprised in this edition.
January, 1899.
THE
CENTURY DICTIONARY
AN ENCYCLOPEDIC LEXICON
OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE
PUBLISHED BY
CJe Century Co.
NEW YORK
Copyright, 1889, 1890, 1891, 1895, 1896, 1897, 1899, 1900, 1901, by The Century Co.
All Rights Reserved.
By permission of Messrs. Blackie & Son, publishers of The Imperial Dictionary by Dr. Ogllvie and
Dr. Annandale, material from that English copyright work has been freely used in the preparation of
The Century Dictionary, and certain owners of American copyrights having claimed that undue use of
matter so protected has been made in the compilation of The Imperial Dictionary, notice is hereby
given that arrangement has also been made with the proprietors of such copyright matter for its use
in the preparation of The Century Dictionary.
KEY TO PRONUNCIATION.
SIGNS.
SPECIAL EXPLANATIONS,
A superior figure placed after a title-word in- Book and chapter nated in the text immediately following, or
dicates that the word so marked is distinct Part and chapter under the title referred to.
etymologieally from other words, following or Book and line The figures by which the synonym-lists are
preceding it, spelled iu the same manner and Book and page ) iii. 10. sometimes divided indicate the senses or defi-
marked with different numbers. Thus Act and scene . . ; nitions with which they are connected.
Chapter and verse ... The title-words begin with a small (lower-
back^ (bak), n. The posterior part, etc. No. and page case) letter, or with a capital, according to
back^ (bak), a. Lying or being behind, etc. Volume and page II. 34. usage. When usage differs, in this matter,
back^ (bak), V. To furnish with a back, etc. Volume and chapter rv. iv. with the different senses of a word, the abbre
back^ (bak), adv. Behind, etc. Part, book, and chapter II. iv. 12. viations leap.'} for "capital" and [/. c] for
backet (bak), n. The earlier form of bat^. Part, canto, and stanza II. iv. 12. " lower-ease " are used to indicate this varia-
back^ (bak), n. A large flat-bottomed boat, Chapter and section or. IT vii. § or H 3. tion.
etc. Volume, part, and section or IF I. i. $ or H 6. The difference observed in regard to the
Book, chapter, and section or H. .1. i. § or IT 6. capitalizing of the second element in zoologi-
Various abbreviations have been used in the cal and botanical terms is in accordance with
credits to the quotations, as " No." for number, Different grammatical phases of the same the existing usage in the two sciences. Thus,
" gt." for stanza, " p." for page, " 1." for line, word are grouped under one head, and distin- in zoology, in a scientific name consisting of
f for paragraph, " fol." tor folio. The method guished by the Roman numerals I., II., III., two words the second of which is derived from
used in indicating the subdivisions of books etc. This applies to transitive and intransi- a proper name, only the first would be capi-
will be understood by reference to the follow- tive uses of the same verb, to adjectives used talized. But a name of similar derivation in
ing plan also as nouns, to nouns used also as adjectives, botany would have the second element also
to adverbs used also as prepositions or con- capitalized.
Section only } 5. junctions, etc. The namfes of zoological and botanical classes,
Chapter only xiv. The capitalizing and italicizing of certain or orders, families, genera, etc., have been uni-
Canto only xiv. all of the words in a synonym-list indicates formly italicized, in accordance with the pres-
Book only ill. that the words so distinguished are discrimi- ent usage of scientific writers.
; ! ; ;:
; ;!
or level.
; ;
ing, like basket-work, which ... is evidently so unsuited
L intrans. 1. To sink or hang down; bend or for stone-work that it is no wonder it was dropped very
From morn J. Fergusson, Hist. Indian Arch., p. 116.
hang downward, as from weakness or exhaus- To noon he and with the setting sun
fell, . . .
early.
tion. Dropp'd from the zenith like a falling star. The member, whether church or minister, can be tried,
Milton, P. L, 745. expelled, dropped, or transferred to a co-ordinate body,
Wei cowde he dre»ae hU takel yemanly 1.
as facts may warrant. Bibliotheca Sacra, XLIII. 418.
HU anres drounede nought with fetheres lowe. The curtain drops on the drama of Indian history about
Chatuxr, Gen. ProL to C. T., L 107. the year 650, or a little later. 7. To utter as if casually: as, to drop a word in
The CTenlng comes, and every little flower J. Fergmson, Hist Indian Arch., p. 209. favor of a friend.
Droopt now, as well aa L
Beau, and Fl., Coxcomb, iii. 3.
4. Specifically, to lie down, as a dog. 5. To — They [the Arabs] had dropt some expressions as if they
wonld assault the boat by night if I staid, which, with-
die, especially to die suddenly; fall dead, as in
Hampden, with hia head drooping, and his hands lean- out doubt, they said that they might make me go away.
battle. Pococke, Description of tlie East,
ing on his horse's neclj, moved feebly out of the battle. It was your presurmise.
I. ii. 105.
Macatdayt Nugent's Uampden. To my great surprise, not a syllable was dropped on the
That in the dole of blows your son might drop.
>'ear the lalse where drooped the willow, Shak., 2 Hen. IV., i. 1.
subject. Lamb, Imperfect Sympathies.
Long time ago. 6. P. Morris.
They see indeed many drop, but then they see many 8. To write and send (a note) in an offhand
2. To languish from grief or other cause ; fall more aUve. Steele, Spectator, No. 162. manner as, drop me a line. 9. To set down
: —
into a state of physical weakness. 6. To come an end; be allowed to cease;
to from a carriage.
Conceiving the dishonour of his mother, be neglected and come to nothing. When Lord Howe came over from Twickenham to see
He straight declin'd, droop'd, took it deeply. him [the King], he said the Queen was going out driving,
I heard of threats, occasioned by my verses I sent to
Shai., W. T., il. S.
;
and should **drop him " at his own house,
acquaint them where I was to be found, and so it dropped. Gremlle, Memoirs, July 18, 1830.
After this King Lelr, more and more drooping with Pope,
Yean, became an easy prey to his Daughters and thir Hus- 7t. To fall short of a mark. [Rare.] To drop a courtesy, to courtesy.
bands. Milton, Hist. Eng., L The girls, with an attempt at simultaneousness, dropped
Often it drops or overshotjts. Collier.
had not been at Sea long before onr Men Ijegan to
Wc "curcheys " of respect The Century, XXXVI. 85.
droop, in a sort of a Uistsraper that stole insensibly on 8. To fall lower in state or condition ; sink To drop a line, To fish with a line. (&) To write a
(a)
theiu. Dampier, Voyage^ I. 524. be depressed; come into a state of collapse or letter or note.— To drop anchor, to anchor.— To drop
One day she drooped, and the next she died ; nor was quiescence. the curtain, .See c«r(oi«.— To drop or weep mill-
there the distance of many hours tjetween her being very stones. See millstone.
easy in this world, and very happy in another.
Down dropl the breeie, the sails dropt down.
[Early mod. E. also droppe; <
Coleridge, Ancient Mariner,
drop (drop), n.
Bp. Attrrbury, Sermons, I. vt ii.
ME. drope, < AS. dropa (= OS. dropo D. drop =
3. To fail or sink ; flag; decline; be dispirited: 9. Naut., to have a certain drop, or depth from = MLG. drope, drape, LG. druppen, drapen =
as, the courage droops; the spirits droop. top to bottom : said of a sail. OHG. iropfo, troffo, MHG. iropfe, 6. tropfen
Myche fere fre, & full was of thoght,
had that Her main top-sail drops seventeen yards. ifor. Diet. = Icel. dropi =
Sw. droppe Dan. draabe), =
AU droupond in drede and in dol lengyt.
A dropping tloOnUU.X a continuous irregular discharge a drop, < AS., etc., 'dredpan, pp. *dropen,
Dettruction nf Troy (E. £. T. 8.), L O03. of smatrarms.— To drop astern (.naut.), to pass or move
toward the stern move liaciv let another Teasel pass
drop: see drop, r.] 1. mass of water or A
But wherefore do you droop f why look so sad? : ;
other liquid so small that the surface-tension
Be great in act, aa you have been in thought. ahead, either by slacki'iiing the speed of the vessel that is
Shak., K. John, t. 1. passed or because of the superior speed of the vessel pass- brings it into a spherical shape more or less
Why droopt my lord, my love, my life, my Cnaar? ing. —To drop away or off. to depart; disam>ear; be modified by gravity, adhesion, etc. ; a globule:
lost sight of as, all my friends dropped away from me as, a drop of blood ; a drop of laudanum.
How 111 this dulness doth comport with greatness :
wont, bat are performed dfeeciiMH and beavUy. zle of a gun. 6. pi. Any
liquid medicine the dose of which
Sharpe, Works, III. iii.
saw him with that lily cropp'd consists of a certain number of drops.
I
drop (drop), r. ; pret. and pp. dropped, ppr. Impatient swim to meet Lydia. Give me the sal volatile.
dropping. [Early mod. E. also droppe; < ME. My quick approach, and soon be dropp'd
Lucy. Is it in a blue cover, ma'am ?
The treasure at my feet Lydia. My smelling-bottle, you .simpleton
droppen, < AS. droppan, also dropian and drop- !
D. droppen =
G. tropfen = =
Cowper, Dog and Water-lily.
lAtey. O, the drops I —
here, ma'am.
petian, dropjietan
8w. droppa, drop; secondary forms of the orig.
—
Hence 4. To let fall from the womb; give Sheridan, The Rivals, L 2.
The quality of mercy la not strain'd ; Lowell, Fits Adam's .Story. 9. In mech., a contrivance arranged so as to
It droppetk as the gentle rain from heaven
Upon the place lieneath. Shak., M. of V., iv. 1. 6. To let go; dismiss; lay aside; break off drop, fall, or hang from a higher position, or
from; omit: as, to drop an affair or a contro- to lower objects. Specifically- (a) A trap-door in
8. To let drops fall ; drip ; discharge in drops. the scaffold of a tisual form of gallows, upon which the
versy ; to drop an acquaintance to drop a let- ;
The faesTen* also dropped at the presence of Ood. criminal about to be executed is placed with the halter
Ps. Uvlli. 8. ter from a word. about hia neck, and which is suddenly dropped or swung
Mine na* may drop for thee, bat thine own beart will He Is now under prosecution but they think it will he ; open on its hinges, letting liim fall, (b) A contrivance
cbe for Itaelf. B. Jotuon, Poetaater, L 1. dropped, oat of pity. Sw(ft, Joomal to Stella, xlix. for lowering heavy weiglits, as bale-goods, to a ship's
112
— ;
O faith. Colonel, you must own you had a drop in your cept that the latter more generally carries the 2. Resembling or partaking of the nature of
eye; for when I left you, you were half seas over. idea of an enrichment of the lode with which it dropsy.
Swift, Polite Conversation, i. unites. 3. — A
dog which is a cross between a dropsicalness (drop'si-kal-nes), TO. The state
—
dropaz (dro'paks), n. [< Gr. SpCma^, a pitch- pointer and a setter. 4. An artificial fly ad- of being dropsical. Bailey, 1727.
plaster, < Spiiretv,_ pluckj pluck off.] prepa- psted to a leader above the stretcher-fly, used dropsied (drop'sid), a. [< dropsy
A -ed?.'] Dis-+
ration for remo'ving hair from the skin ; a de- in angling. Also called bobber and drop-fly. eased with dropsy; unnaturally swollen; ex-
pilatory. [Bare or unused.] See vthip. hibiting an unhealthy inflation.
drop-bar (drop'bar), n. In printing, a bar or And observe, that if your droppers be larger than, or Where great additions swell, and virtue none,
even as large as, your stretcher, you will not be able to It is a dropsied honour. Shak., All's Well, ii. 3.
roller attached to a printing-press for the pur-
throw a good line. /. Walton, Complete Angler, ii. 5, note.
pose of regulating the passage of the sheet to dropstone (drop'ston), ». A
stalactitio variety
impression. In the rotary press the bar drops at a fixed dropping (drop'ing), n. [< ME. droppynge, < of calcite. See stalactite.
time on the edge of the sheet, and with an eccentric re- AS. dropung, a dropping, verbal n. of dropian, dropsy (drop'si), «. [Early mod. E. also dropsie ;
volving motion draws it forward. In some forms of the drop: see drop, u.] 1. The act of falling in < ME. dropsy, dropcsye, abbr. by apheresis of
cylinder-press the bar drops on the edge of the sheet and
drops ; a falling. ydropsie, hydropsie: seehydropsy.l 1. In med.,
holds it firmly in position until it is seized by the grippers.
Also called drop-voller. A continual dropping in a very rainy day and a conten- a morbid accumulation of watery liquid in any
drop-black (drop'blak), n. See hlaclc. tious woman are alike. Prov. xxvii. 15. cavity of the body or in the tissues. See edema,
drop-bottom (drop'bofum), n. A bottom, as 2. That which drops or is dropped: generally anasarca, and ascites.
of a ear, which can be let fall or opened down- in the plural. And lo a man syk in the dropesye was bifore him.
ward a common device for unloading certain Wyclif, Luke liv.
:
Like eager droppings into milk. Skak., Hamlet, i. 5.
kinds of railroad-cars. But the sad Dropsie freezeth it extream,
All the Countrey is overgrowne with trees, whose dro2>- Till all the blood be turned into fleam.
drop-box (drop'boks), n. In a figure-weaving pings continually turneth their grasse to weeds, by reason Sylvester, tr. of Du Bartas's Weeks, ii., The Furies.
loom, a box for holding a number of shuttles, of the rancknes of the ground, which would soone be
2. In bot., a disease in succulent plants caused
each carrying its own color, and so arranged amended by good husbandry.
that any one of the shuttles can be brought into
Capt. John Smith, True Travels, I. 121. —
by an excess of water. 3. In fish-culture, a
action as required by the pattern. Specifically —3. pi. Dung: especially said of the
disease of young trout. Before the food-sac is gone
the trout are often affected with a swelling over the sac,
drop-curls (drop'kferlz), n. pi. Curls dropping dung of fowls : as, the droppings of the henroost. where a membrane forms, swells out, and is filled with a
loose from the temples or sides of the head. — 4. In glass-making, one of the lumps or glob- watery substance. An incision is sometimes made in the
drop-curtain (drop'ker'''tan), n. Same as drop, ules formed in the glass by the glazing of the swelling to let out the water. Also called blue swelling.
9 (c). clay cover of the melting-vessel and its com- drop-table (drop'ta'''bl), to. a
machine for
drop-drill (drop'dril), n. An agricultural im- lowering weights, and especially for removing
bination with the volatilized alkalis. The crude
plement which drops seed and manure into the the wheels of locomotives.
glass thus formed on the cover drops into the molten glass
in the vessel, rendering it defective.
soil simultaneously. See drilft, 3. drop-the-handkerchief (drop ' the -hang ' ker-
dropping-bottle (drop'ing-bot''''l), n. An instru-
drop-fingers (drop'fing''g6rz), «. pi. In print- ment for supplying small quantities of water to ehif), n. A children's game in which one player
ing, two or more finger-like rods attached to having a handkerchief drops it behind any one
test-tubes, etc.; an eduleorator. of the others, who are formed in a ring, and
some forms of cylinder printing-presses for the Same as tries to escape within the ring before being
dropping-tube (drop'ing-tub), n.
purpose of holding the sheet in fixed position dropper, 1 (o).
until it is seized by the grippers. kissed.
drop-press (drop'pres), n. swaging-, stamp- A
drop-fly (drop'fli), n. In angling, same as drop- ing-, or f orging-machine having either a regular drop-tin (drop'tin), TO. Tin pulverized by be-
per, 4. ing dropped into water while melted.
(Urop-forging (drop' for 'jing), n. A forging hammer moving between vertical guides, and delivering a drop'wise (drop'wiz), adv. [< drop + -wise.l
or an intermittent motion, it is essentially a power-
produced by a drop-press. dead-stroke blow either from its own weight or by weight
After the manner of drops; droppingly; by
drop-glass (drop'glas), n. A dropping-tube or combined with power. In simple machines the weight is drops. [Rare.]
pipette, used for dropping a liquid into the eye raised above the anvil by hand by means of a cord, and let In mine own lady palms I cuU'd the spring
fall; but as these macliines are wasteful of labor they That gather'd trickling dropwise from the cleft.
or elsewhere. have been largely superseded by power-machines, in which Tennyson, Merlin and Vivien.
drop-bammer (drop'ham''er), n. Same as drop- the weight is raised by a strap wound over a drum, or by drop-'WOrm (drop'werm), TO. The larva of one
press. a wooden slat pressed between two pulleys revolving in
opposite directions, or by direct connection with a wrist of many insects. Specifically- (a) Of any geometrid
drop-handle (drop'han'dl), n. A form of on a disk-wheel. The weight is either released at any moth. Also called span-worm, inch-worm, measuring-
needle-telegraph instrument in which the cir- f)oint of itspath by some simple device controlled by a worvi, etc. (b) Of Thyridopteryz ephemeroeformis. Also
cuit-making device is operated by a handle ever within reach of the operator's hand or foot, or it called hang-worm, and bag-worm.
projecting downward. descends by the movement of the disk. If a spring is drop'WOrt (drop'wert), n. An English name for
interposed between the weight and the lifting apparatus,
drop-keel (drop'kel), n. Naut., same as center- the Spircea Filipcndula False dropwort, an Amer.
whatever its form, to absorb the recoil, it is called a dead- lean book-name for Tiedcmannia teretifotia, an umbellifer-
board. [Eng.] stroke hammer or press. In the drop-presses employing
droplet (drop'let), n. [< drop + -let.} little A a strap or other lifting device that is released at the will
—
ous plant of the Atliintic States. Hemlock- and water-
dropwort, common book-names for species of (Enanthe,
drop. of the operator, the blows are intermittent. Where the
connection with a wheel is direct, the blows are regular droschka, n. Same as droshky.
Though thou abhorr'dst in us our human griefs, and uniform so long as the machine works. All things drose, v. i. See droze.
Scorn dst our brain's flow, and those our droplets which shaped from hot metals on a drop-press, such as small Drosera (dros'e-ra), TO. [NL., < Gr. Spoacpd^,
From niggard nature fall. Shak., 1. of A., v. 6. parts of machines, are called drop-forgings. The drop- dewy, < (5/)(}(Tof,"dew, water, jnitfe, prob. ult. <
drop-letter (drop'let'''' 6r), n. A letter intended press is sometimes called simply press, and sometimes
drop-hammer. It should not be confounded with the (Skt.) •/ dru, run.] A
genus of plants giving
for a person residing within the delivery of the stamping-press, which, while it is allied to the drop-press, name to the order Droseracem. There are about
post-office where it is posted. [U. S.] differs essentially in its manner of working. 100 species, found iu all parts of the globe exceptUig the
! ;
;
which exude dmps of a clear glutinous fluid that ulitler action of the zinc on the iron of the pot, but liight, highth), < ME. drought, drowght, drugt,
in tlie sun ; hence the name Drotera, and in English sun-
dew. These glandular hairs retain small insects that touch chiefly from the iron articles dipped, and from drogt; in the second, the more orig. form, early
them, and other hairs around the dripping off of the superfluous amalgam mod. E. also drougth, < ME. drougth, druhth,
those actually touched by tl>e AQ as they come from the bath. W. H. Wahl. — drogthe, drugthe; < AS. drugath, drugoth (= D.
insect bend over and inclose it, droogte), dryness, < dryge, orig. *druge (= D.
ITie excitement of the glands
induces the secretion of a di-
JT
M
«
3. Figuratively, a worthless thing; the value-
less remainder of a once valued thing. droog),diry: aeo dry. i)roM</t is thus equi v. to
dry-ih (which form is occasionally used, like
gestive fluid, under the opera-
tion of which the nutritious
^ The world's glory is but dross unclean. Spenser.
warvi-th, etc.). Drouth is etymologically the
nitrogenous matter of the in-
The past gain each new gain makes a loss.
And yesterday's gold love to-day makes dross. more correct spelling. Both forms have been
sect is dissolved and absorljed.
Tlie common European species
William, Morris, Earthly Paradise, III. 340. in concurrent use since the ME. period, but
have long had a popular repu- dross (dros), V. t. [< dross, n.] To remove drought has been the more common.] If. Dry-
tation as a remedy for bronchi- dross from. ness.
tis and astlinia.
Drossing is performed with a lai'ge perforated iron spoon With the drowghte of the daye alle drj'e ware the flores
Droseraceae (<lros-e-ra'- ilorte Arthure (E. E. T. S.), 1. 3250.
or ladle, through the openings of which the fluid zinc runs
86-e), n. pi. [XL., < Dro- off, while the dross is retained, packed into shallow moulds The Asp, says Gesner, by reason of her exceeding
sera +
-acete.^ Anattiral so as to fonu slabs of alxiut seventy-five pounds weight, drou'jht, is accounted deaf but that one Asp ^ deafer
;
order of polypetalous in- and in this form is usually sold to the smelters and refin- than another I read not. Cotcfrave.
ers, who gain the zinc it contains either by distillation or
sectivorous herbs, grow- by special patented procedures. 2. Dry weather; want of rain or of moisture;
ing in marshy localities H'. H. Wahl, Galvanoplastic Manipulations, p. 529. such a continuance of dry weather as injtiri-
in temperate and tropi- ously vegetation ariduess.
drossardt (dros'Srd), n. [< D. drossaard, MD. affects ;
cal regions, having their drossacrt (with accom. term, -aard, -aert = E. Whan that Aprille with his shoures soote
leaves mostly circinate -ard), earlier MD. drossaet, D. drost = OFries. The droghte of March hath perced to the roote,
in vernation and covered Stmdew iZ>rcsfra rotHHdi-
drusta = MLG. drossete (> ML. drossatus), drot- Chaucer, Gen. Prol. to C. T., 1. 2.
fotia).
with numerous glandu- LG. droste = OHG.
zete, drucsete, droste, druste,
In a drought the thirsty creatures cry,
lar viscid hairs. Of the « genera, Drosera (which see) And gape upon the gather'd clouds for rain.
'truhtsdzo, truhsd^o, trutsdzo, truhsazzo, MHG. Dryden, Annus Mirabilis.
ia by far the largest. Of the others, Dioncea is character-
ized by having foliaceous petioles bearing a two-lobed lam- truhtseze, truhts(eze, trochtsaze, truhsteze, trueh- In the dust and drouth of London life
ina which closes quicldy when touched, and Aldrovanda seze, G. truchsess —
Icel. drottseti Sw. drot- = She moves among my visions of the lake.
by having pitcher-shaped leaves. See cut under Dionaa. tsdt, drozet, drozt, drots =
Dan. drost (< LG.), Tennyson, .Edwin Morris.
droshky, drosky (drosh'-, dros'ki), m. ; pi. an oflicer whose duty it was to set the meat on 3. Thirst; want of drink.
droshkien, dioskks (-Idz). [Also written dro:h- the table of his prince or sovereign, a steward, As one, whose drouth
ki, etc. ; = F. droschki = D. droschke = Dan. server, grand master of the kitchen, hence in
Yet scarce allay'd, still eyes the current stream.
Milton, P. L., vii. 66.
droske =: Sw. droska, < G. droschke, a droshky, extended use a steward, bailiff, constable, pre-
cab, etc., =
Pol. dro:hka, dorozhka, < Buss. fect, chief officer, appar. (as best shown in 4. Figuratively, scarcity; lack.
dro^hki (= Little Russ. arnzhky), a droshky, OHG.) < OHO. tru/i«(= OS. druM AQ.dryht, =
A drought of Christian writers caused a dearth of all his-
Fuller.
dim. of droffi, a carriage, a hearse, prop. pi. of (in'At), the people, multitude, company, follow- y>^- ,, .,,,,
drog/i, the pole or shaft of a carriage. Not con- ing (see drtght), OHG. sdzo (= AS. sceta, etc. : droughts, „. dialectal form of (?ra/«l, draughts
+ A
nected with Kuss. dormja, a road (= Pol. droga see cotset) one who sits or settles the com- droughtiness, drouthiness (drou'ti-nes, -thi-
:
= Boheqi. draija, dralui, a road, OBulg. Serv. = pound appar. meaning orig. the officer who as- nes), n. The state of being droughty; dry
draga, a valley), dim. dorozhka ( > Pol. dorozhkd), signed a prince's guests or followers their seats ness ariduess.
a little road, though the second Pol. form simu- at table. Less prob. the first element is OHG. droughty, drouthy (drou'ti, -thi), a. 1. Char-
lates such a connection.] A
kind of light four- truht, a load, draught, provisions (akin to E. acterized by drought ; dry.
wheeled carriage used in Russia and Prussia. drafts, draught^), the lit. meaning of the com- Oh can the cloud.s weep over thy decay,
!
The droAhky proper is without a U>\t. and consists of a kind pound suiting then its first known actual use, Yet not one drop fall from thy droughty eyes?
of lung narrow Iwnch, on which the passengers ride as on Drayton, The Barons' Wars, ii.
a swldle but the name is now applied to various kinds of
;
one who sets the meat on the table.] stew- A
When the man of God calls to her "Fetch me a little
vehicles, as to the common cabs plying in the streets of ard; a bailiff; a prefect. water," ... it was no easy suit in so droughtie a season.
some German cities, etc.
There is ... * drostard of Limburgh near this place Bp. Hall, Elijah.
—
Z>nMiiu the smallest carriage* In the world, mere (to whom I g«ve an Exemplar of R. B. s Apology) very de- The sun of a drouthy summer was shining on the . . .
sledges on wheels, with drivers like old women in low. sirous to speak with some of the friends. heath. R. W. Dixon, Hist. Church of Eng., xv.
crowned hatoand long blue dressing-gowns buttonetl from Penn, Travels in Holland,
etc.
dressiness (dros'i-nes), n. The quality or state 'dniukncn (see droukening), < Icel. drukiia
into the pulp and prodncing whitish blisters on of being drossy ; foulness; impurity.
=
attacks potatoes.
Dan. driikne, be drowned: see drown, where
the iij)iier side. I). cfUarix
The furnace of affliction being meant but to reBne us the k is lost in the «.] To drench; wet thor-
drosophore (dros'o-for), «. [< Gr. Apoaoc, dew, + from our earthly drostinets, and soften ns for the impres- Also dratck.
-Sxi/i'it, < ipepiii; bear.] A device for spraving sion of liod's own stamp ami image. Boyle, Works, 1. 275. oughly. And aye she took the tither souk
wate'r into air to increase ite humidity ; a kind
droggieaa (dros'les), a. [< dross -less."] Free +To drouk the stowrie tow.
of iitornizer. frora dross. Burns, The Weary Pund o' Tow.
dross (dros), n. [Early mod. E. also drossc; < drossy (dros'i), a. [< dross -yt.] Like dross; +
droukeningt, droukningt, »• [ME., also drouk-
ME. ilniHse, earlier dros, < AS. dros =
MLG. pertaining to dross; abounding with dross, or ing, < 'drouken, 'droukiieii, drench: see drouk.'\
dros =
MD. droes, dregs. The more common waste or worthless material: applied to metals, 1. A slumbering; slumber; a doze.
AS. word is 'drosen (or 'drosen), always in sjTi- and figuratively to other things.
Ais I lay in a winteris nyt in a droukening before the day.
copated pi. drosna (or 'drosna) (= mD. droes- So doth the Are the drossy gold refine. Debate of Body and Soul, I. 1. (Lat. Poems attrib. to
sem, D. droe-tem =
MLG. druse OHG. tnuana, = Sir J. Davies, Immortal, of Soul. Int [W. Mapes, ed. Wright)
trusna, drusena, drusina, MHG. drusene, dnuine, A wise man, like a good refiner, can gather gold out of 2. swoon. A
drussene, OHO. also truosana, truoaena, tmotina, the drossiest volume. Milton, Areopagitica, p. 21. Alle thel seiden thei weore sort,
truogen, dmosaiut, MHO. truosen, druosene, 0. Many more of the same bevy, that, I know, the drossy For-doiled in a drouknyng dred.
Shak., Hamlet, v. 2. Holy Rood (E. E. T. ».), p. 141.
dnum), lees, dregs, < dre6san (pp. droren for age doats on.
'drosen) =
OS. driosan =
Norw. drjosa Goth. =
The heart restor'd and purg'd from drossy nature droukit, drooket (dro'kit, -ket), p. a. [Pp. of
driusan (LG. drusen, etc.), fall: see drizzle, and Now finds the freedom of a new-bom creature. drouk, q. v.] Drenched. [Scotch.]
<iwtrles. Emblems, IL 15.
et. drozc, droicni'.'\ Refuse or
1. ..^...^ „. impure
.„^,..v, or for- j The last Halloween I was-waukln'
eign matter which separates from a liquid and drot (drot), r. (. as drat^.o
^me My droukit sark-sleeve, as ye ken.
rusculuni. Prompt. Parv., p. 133. Gait, Annals of the Parish, drouth, drouthiness, etc See drought}, etc.
p. 336.
drosse that from the metall came,
Some acumil the
stlrd the molten owre with ladles great. drought. A Middle English form of the preterit drove^. Preterit and obsolete and dialectal
Spenser, V. Q., IL vU. 36. of dravn. past participle of drive.
; : ; ;
Of moistfull matter, Shak., Rich. III., i. 4. ful began to be very dull and heavy of sleep wherefore ;
That haunt tlie HUs and Dales, and Downs and Groues. water or other liquid hence, to destroy, extin-
;
here and take one nap.
Sylvester, tr. of Du Bartas"s Weeks, i. 4. guish, or ruin by or as if by submersion. Bunyan, Pilgrim's Progress, i., Enchanted Ground.
The sounds and seas, with all their fluny drove. The sea cannot drown me I swam, ere I could recover
:
2. Resulting from or affected by drowsiness
Mow to the moon in the shore, five-and-thirty leagues, off and on.
wavering morrice move.
Shak., Tempest,
characteristic of or marked by a state of drows-
iii. 2.
Milton, Comus, 1. 115.
ing.
I feel I weep apace but Where's the flood,
Where droves, as at a city gate, may pass.
;
Therest around the hostel fire
Dryden, tr. of Juvenal's Satires. The torrent of my tears to drown my fault in ? Their drowsy limbs recline.
Beau, and Fl., Knight of Malta, iv. 2.
Scott, Marmion,
2. A road or drive for sheep or cattle in droves. I try'd in Wine to droicn the mighty Care
iiL 26.
[Great Britain.] —
3. A narrow channel or But wine, alas, was Oyl to th' Fire.
Cowley, The Mistress, The Incurable.
;
My heart aches, and a drowsy numbness pains
My sense. Keats, Ode to a Nightingale.
drain,' used iu the irrigation of land. [Great
Britain.] The barley is then steeped too much, or, as the maltster 3. Disposing to sleep; lulling; soporific: as, a
(drov), v. t. ; pret. and pp. dr<rved, ppr.
expresses it, is drowned. Thausing, Beer (trans.), p. 281. drowsy couch.
drove^
droving. [Sc, usually in pp. droved; prob. a 2. To overflow inundate ; : as, to drown land. The hoary willows waving with the wind,
To dew the sovereign and drown the weeds. In drowsy murmurs luU'd the gentle maid.
secondary form (after drovei, drove^) of drive; flower,
Addison.
cf. D. drijven, drive, also engrave, emboss.] In Shak., Macbeth, v. 2.
The bowl with drowsy juices filled
masonry, to tool roughly.— Droved and broached, If it ftlie storm] had continued long without y« shifting FYom cold Egyptian drugs distilled.
of yo wind, it is like it would have drowned some parte of Addisfni, Kosamond,
a phrase applied to worlc that has been first rouy:h-liewn, yo cuntrie.
iii. 3-
Brati/ord, riymontli Plantation, p. 337.
—
and then totaled clean. Droved and striped, a plirjise I hate to learn the ebb of time
applied to work tliat is first rouj^li-t^oled, and then formed The trembling peasant sees his country round From yon dull steeple's drowsy chime.
into shallow grooves or stripes with a lialf- or three-quar- Covered with tempests, and in oceans drowned. Scott, L. of the L., vi. 24.
ter-im-h rliisel. liavin^ the droved interetioes prominent. Addison, The Campaign.
— Droved ashler, .see ashler.
4. Dull; sluggish; stupid.
A weir is said to be drowned when the water in the I would give you a drowsy relation, for it is that time of
drove-* (drov), «. [See rfrorcS, «.] Achisel,from channel below it is Ingher than its crest.
night, though I called it evening. Donne, Letters, Ixii.
two to four inches broad, usedin making droved Rankine, Steam Engine, § 137.
work. 3. Figuratively, to plunge deeply ; submerge Those inadvertencies, a body would think, even our
autlior,with all his drowsy reasoning, could never have
drove^t, drevet, ». t. [ME. drovcn, drevcn, < overwhelm: as, to drown remorse in sensual been capable of. Bp. Atterbury.
AS. drcfan (for *dr6fian), trouble, agitate, dis- pleasure.
turb (the mind), =
OS. drobhian MLG. dro- = Both man and child, both maid and wife,
drowsyhead (drou'zi-hed), «, [In Spenser
ven, LG. driiven =
MD. droeven OHG. trnobun, = Were drown'd in pride of Spain. drowsihed; < drowsy + -hend.] Drowsiness;
truohen, MH6. triioben, triicbeu, G. triibcn, troti- Qkc c?i Eleanor's Fall (Child's Ballads, VII. 293). sleepiness; tendency to sleep. [Archaic]
ble, =
Sw. be-drofva =
Dan. be-drme, grieve, My private voice is drowned amid the senate. A pleasing land of drowsf/head it was, •
trouble, =
Goth, drobjan, cause trouble, excite Addison, Cato. Of dreams that wave before the half-shut eye.
Thomson, Castle of Inijolence, i 6.
an uproar; connected with the adj., AS. drof, To drown out, to force to come out, leave, etc., by influx
of water drive out by flooding or by fear of drowning. These hours of drowsihead were the season of the old
etc., troubled: seedrof^.] To trouble; afflict; ;
One who drives cattle or sheep to market ; one enemy of virtue, droumer of youthe. Aschain, Toxophilus. ppr. drozing. [E. dial., also freq. drosle; prob.
who buys cattle in one place to sell in another. connected -with dross and drowse, ult. < AS.
drO'WSe (drouz),i). %. ; pret. andpi). drowsed, ppr.
The temple itself was pr«faned into a den of thieves, drowsing. [Also drowse, formerly drouse, drouge, dredsan, fall: see drizzle, dross, dtowse."] To
and a rendezvous of higlers and drovers. melt and drip down, as a candle. Grose; Halli-
'
South, Sermons, III. .Sll.
prob. < ME. *drotisen (not found), < AS. drusan,
well. [Prov. Eng.]
drusian, sink, become slow or sluggish (rare)
2t. A
boat driven by the wind: probably only (= MD. droosen, slumber, doze; cf. LG. driin- drub (drub), V. t. ; pret. and pp. drubbed, ppr.
in the passage cited. drubbing. [Appar. orig. dial, form (= E. dial.
sen, driinseln, slumber, drunsen, low, as a cow,
He woke
And saw his drover drive along the streame. drawl in speech), < dredsan (= Goth, driusan, (Kent) drab for *drob), a var. or secondary form
Spetiser, F. Q., III. viii. 22. etc.), fall: see drizzle, dross, droee.'] To be of "drop, "drop (E. dial, dryp and drih : see
heavy with sleepiness ; be half asleep hence, drib^), beat, < ME. drepen (pret. drop, drop,
drovingl (dro'ving), 71. [< drove^ +
-ing^.']
to be heavy or dull.
;
drape), strike, kill, < AS. drepan (pret. *drwp,
The occupation of a drover. [Rare.]
He drowsed upon
drep, pp. dropen, drepen), strike, LG. drapen, =
droving^ (dro'ving), n. [Verbal n. of drove^, «.] his couch. South, Sermons, IV. 78.
drdpen =
OHG. treffan, MHG. G. treffen,\\t,
A method of hewing the faces of hard stones, Let not your prudence,
The Danaid of a leaky vase.
dearest, drowse, or prove
Tennyson, Princess, ii.
touch, concern, Icel. drepa Sw. drdpa = = =
similar to random-tooling or boasting. See Dan. drwbe. Mil, slay (cf. Sw. drabba, hit).]
drove^, v —Droving and striping, in stone-cutting,
the making with the chisel of shallow parallel channels
In the pool drowsed the cattle up to their knees.
Lowell, Sir Launfal, i. To beat with a stick; cudgel; belabor; thrash;
= Syn. Doze, Slumber, etc. See sleep. beat iu general.
or grooves alon^ the leniith of a l-ough-hewn stone.
drovyt (dro'vi), a. [The reg. mod. form would drowse (drouz), n. [< droiDse, ».] state of A
Captain Swan came to know the Business, and marr'd
all undeceiving the General, and druhbiny the Noble-
be *droovy =
E. dial, druvy, druivy, thick, mud- somnolency; a half -sleep. man.
;
Cf droll.'\ One of a diminutive elfish race sup- ner; sleepily; heavily: as, he drowsily raised drubbing (drub'ing), n. [Verbal n. of drub, ».]
.
posed by superstitious people in the Shetland his head. 2. Sluggishly; languidly; slothful- A cudgeling a sound beating.
— ;
islands to reside in hills and caverns, and to be ly; lazily. drudge^ (dmj), v. i. ; pret. and pp. drudged, ppr.
curious artificers in iron and precious metals. Droivsily the banners wave drudging. [< ME. druggen, work hard ; said to
O'er her that was so chaste and fair. Praed. be of Celtic origin cf. Ir. drugairc, a slave
I hung about thy neck that gifted chain, which all in ;
our isles know was wrought by no earthly artist, but by drowsiness (drou'zi-nes), n. 1. Sleepiness; or drudge, drugaireachd, slavery, drudgery;
the Draws in the secret recesses of their caverns. disposition to sleep lassitude. ;
but these forms are prob. of E. origin. Cf.
Scott, Pirate, x.
'Tis like the murmnnng of a stream, which, not varying
drug^, a drudge, So. drug, pull forcibly, drug,
drowghtt, n. An obsolete form of drought^. in the fall, causes at first attention, at last drowsiness. a rough pull, E. dial, drug, a timber-carriage,
drown (droun), v. [Early mod. E. a\so droun; Dryden, Essay on Dram. Poesy. drudge'^, a large rake, as a verb, harrow, E. =
< ME. drownen, drounen, contr. of earlier rfrttnc- He bore np against drowsiness and fever till his master dredge^. The word is thus prob. ult. < AS.
nen, druncnien, < GNorth. druncnia (= leel. was pronounced convalescent. Macaulay, Hist. Eng., vii. dragan, E. draw : see draw, drag, dredge^."] To
drukna =Sw. drunkna =
Dan. drukne, intr., 2t. Sluggishness; sloth; laziness. work hard, especially at servile, mechanical,
drown, sink, =
AS. druncnian =
OHG. <r«»- Drowsiness shall clothe a man with rags. Frov. xxiii. 21. or uninteresting work labor in tedious, drag- ;
:;: — .;
To dniijge aud drawe. beverage, by mixture with a drug: as, to drug druid, nom. pi. and dual druad, later Ir. and
Ckaucer, Knight's Tale, 1. 658.
wine (in order to render the person who drinl^ Gael, drairi, gen. dri<ad/(, a magician (L. magus);
Fair are your Words, as fair your Carriage
Let me l)e free, drud'je you in Marriage.
;
it insensible). also later nom. druidh =
W. derwydd (orig. nom.
Prior, Tlie Mice. Tlie surfeited grooms *dryv!), a druid. Cf AS. dry, a magician, < Olr.
.
ical labor; one who labors hard in servile or then robbed. order of priests or ministers of religion among
uninteresting employments ; a spiritless toiler. A sorrow's crown of sorrow is remembering happier things. the ancient Celts of Gaul, Britain, and Ireland.
Drug thy memories, lest thou learn it, lest thy heart be The chief seats of the druids were in Wales, Brittany, and
Another kind uf bondman they have, when a vile drudge, put to proof. Tennyson, Locksley Hall.
l)eing a poor labourer in another country, doth choose of the regions around the modern Dreux and Chartres In
hid own free will to be a bondman among them.
'
With
rebellion, thus sugar-coated, they have been drug- France. The druids are believed to liave possessed some
Sir T. More, Utopia (tr. by RobinsouX U. 8. ging the public mind of their section for more than thirty knowledge of geometry, natural philosophy, etc. They
years. Lincoln, in Eaymoud, p. 145. superintemled the affairs of religion and morality, and
I can but wait upon you. performed the oltice of judges. The oak is said to have
And be your drudge ; keep a poor life to serve you. 4. To surfeit ; disgust. represented to tlieni the one supreme God, and the mis-
Fletcher, Humorous Lieutenant, iU. 2. With pleasure drugg'd, he almost long'd for woe. tletoe when growing upon it the dependence of man
How did the toiling ox his death deserve, Byron, Childe Harold, i. 6. upon him; and they accordingly held these in the highest
A downright simple drudge, and lx>m to serve? veneration, oak-groves being their places of worship. 'They
l>r3/</<-n,"^ Pythagorean Philos., L 177.
H. To
prescribe or administer drugs
intrans.
are said to have had a ctmimon superior, who was elected
or medicines, especially to excess. by a majority of votes from their own members, aud who
drudge'-' (dmj), n. [E. dial., ult. dredge^, n.] = the doses of your drugging doctors. enjoyed his dignity for life. The druids, as an order, al-
1. Alarge rake. UaUiwell. [Prov. Eng.] 2. — Past all
B. Jtmion, Alchemist, ii. 1.
ways opposed the Romans, but were ultimately extermi-
nated by them. [Very commonly written with a capital.]
A dredge. drug^t (drug), ji. [See drudge'^.'] A drudge.
drudge* (druj), r. t. ; pret. and pp. drudged, As those Druids taught, which kept the British rites.
ppr. drudging. [E. dial., ult. dredge^, v. t] = Hadst thou, like us, from our first swath proceeded And dwelt in darksome groves, there counselling with
The sweet degrees that tills brief world affords sprites. Drayton, Polyolbion, i. 35.
To harrow. HalUicell. [Prov. Eng.] To such as may the passive drugs of it Thir Religion was governd by a sort of Priests or Magi-
dirudge-* (druJ), n. [Origin obscure.] Whisky Freely command, thou wouldst have plung'd thyself
cians call'd Dnddcs from the Greek name of an Oke, which
in the raw state, as used in the manufacture In general riot. Shak., T. of A., iv. 3.
Tree tliey had in grcate reverence, and the Missleto espe-
of alcohol. [U. S.] drugS (drug), n. Same as drogue. cially growing theron. Milton, Hist. Eng., ii.
Dead they He. is, the physician of the soul after the druqster of the bmly. drumi, t'.] 1. A musical instrument of the per-
As these were times when loyalty's a drug. South, Works, I. iv. cussive class, consisting of a hollow wooden or
And seal in a subordinate too cheap
And oonuDOO to be saved when we spend
spen life druld (dro'id), 71. [= G. druide = F. druide = metallic body and a tightly stretched head of
Brmming, King and Book, II. SSO, Sp. Pg. druida = It. druido, < L, druida, pi. membrane which is struck with a stick. Three
——
: — ;
dmm 1782
principal tomu
are used (1) cylindrical, with one head
: red-hass, gea-btus. See cut under redjish. Bass drum, — drumbelo (drum'be-16), n. [E. dial. : see drum-
aud an open bottom, usually called a tambouritit or a musical instrument, the largest of the drmn family, c] A dull, lieavy fellew.
ble'^,
^nptian arum ; (2) heniisphorieat, with one head, usually having a cylindrical body and two heads of membrane,
called a ktttUdrum ; (3) cylindrical, with two heads, one the tension of which may be altered by hoops. It is struck drumblelf (drum'bl), v. i. [Appar. freq. of
of which can be struck, as" in a side-drum or snare-drum, with a soft-headed stick. It is conunonly used in mili- drum, v., after D. trommelen = G. trommeln =
or both of which can Ite struck, as in the bass drum. All tary bands, and occasionally in full orchestras. Formerly Dan. tromle = Sw. truvda, drum (see drum, v.);
these (onus ai-e used to some extent in orchestral music, calledtoi,7dram.~Beat or tuckof drum. Seebeat^.— but perhaps in part of other origin. Cf. drum-
but the kettledrum only is important, because it alone can Circulating drum, in water-heatei-s or steam-boilers, a
be perfectly tuned. Orchestral drums ai-e generally used chamber dispo.sed to receive a flow of heated water in ble'^.] 1. To sound like a drum.
in pai», and tuned to ditferent pitches. The third form order to alluid room near tlie heating surface for other The whistling pipe and drumbling tabor.
iu all itfi varieties is much used in military music, prin- bodies of water from parts of the boiler remote from the Drayton, Nymphidia, viii.
cipally toemphasize rhythm. Are. —
Double drum, a former name of the bass drum.
I would wish them rather to be chosen out of all partes Drum of cod, a lai-ge cask or hogshead, containing from 2. To mumble.HalUwell.
f>(K) to 1,000 pounds, into which the cod are packed tight- drumble^t (drum'bl), v. i. [Cf. drumble^ and
of the realme, either by discretion of wise men thereunto
appoyuted, or by lott, or by the drumuie^ as was tlie old ly and pressed down with a jack-screw and shipped. dumble^.'] To drone be sluggish.
use iu sending f oorthe of colonyes. Drum of the ear. Same as tympanum. Muffled drum, — ;
Spen$cr, State of Ireland. a drum having the cord which is used for carrying the Go take up these clothes here, quickly ; look, how . . .
drum over the shoulder passed twice through the cords you drumble. Shak., M. W. of W., iii. 3.
The dmmnm crie dub a dub. Qaxoigne, Flowers. which cross the lower diameter of the drum, to prevent a
Your nether party fire must, sharp sound, or to render the sound grave and solemn. drumble-drone (drum'bl-dron), n. [E. dial,
Then beat a Hving dnan. And our hearts, though stout and brave,
also drumble-drane; < drumble -I- drone; cf. dum-
Battle of I'hitiphautih (Child's Ballads, VII. 134). Still, like viu^ed drums, are beating hlcdnrc.~\ 1. drone. 2.A — A bumblebee.
2. In arch. : (a) The solid part of the Corinthian Funeral marches to the grave. 3. A dor-beetle. Eingsley.
Longfellow, Psalm of Life. MD. drommeUr, a
and Composite capital, otherwise called bell, dnunblert (drum'bl6r), n. [<
vase, or basket. (6) One of the blocks of nearly dnun^ (drum), V. ; pret. and pp. drummed, ppr. kind of ship (Kilian). Cf. MD. D. drommeler, a
cylindrical form of which the shafts of many drumming. [= I), trommen = Dan. tromme = man of square and compact build, < drommel,
columns are constructed, (c) An upright mem- Sw. trumma, drum; also freq. E. drumble, q. v.; things packed close together, < drom, a thread,
ber under or above a dome. 3. In mack., a — from the noun, bu* felt to be in part imitative. = E. thrum'^, q. v.] A kind of ship.
See drum^, «., andcf. thrutn^.'] I. intrans. 1. To
term applied to various contrivances resem- She was immediatly assaulted by diuers English pinas-
bling a drum in shape. Specifically— (a) A cylin- beat a drum beat or play a tune on a drum.
; ses, Iioyes, and drumblers. Hakluyt's Voyages, I. 001.
der revolving on an axis for the purpose of turning wheels 2. To beat rhythmically or regularly with the
by means of t>elts or bands passing round it. {b) The fingers or something else, as if using drum-
drum-call (drum'kal), n. In milit. music, a call,
tHirr«l of a crane or windlass, (c) A cylinder on which signal, or command given upon the drum.
sticks: as, to drum on the table.
wire is wound, as in wire-drawing, (d) The grinding cyl-
inder or cone of some mills. (*') The cast-iron case winch He drummed upon his desk with his ruler and medi-
drum-curb (drum'kerb), n. wooden or iron A
cylinder set in the opening of a shaft, at the
holds the coiled spring of a spring car-brake. (./") A cir- tated. W. M. Baker, New Timothy, p. 274.
cular radiator for steam or hot air a stove-drum or steam- beginning of its construction, to sustain the
;
There was no sound but the druinming of the General's
drum, (p) In water-heaters or steam-boilers, a chamber fingers on his sword-hilt. lining. The eai"th is cut away under the edges of the
into which heated water is made to tlow in order to afford drum, and as it settles down courses of brick are added to
G. W. Cable, Old Creole Days, p. 281.
room for other bodies of water from parts of the boiler nut the lining at the top.
so near the fire, (h) A steam-tight cask in which printed 3. To beat, as the heart ; throb. drum-cylinder (drum'si^'in-dSr), n. In a print-
fabrics are submitted to the action of steam to tix the col- His drumming heart cheers up his burning eye, ing-press, a large cylinder making one revolu-
ors, A washing-tub for cleaning rags iu paper-making,
(t)
His eye commends the leading to his hand.
(j) A doffer in a carding-machine. tion to each impression.
See cylinder-press.
Shak., Lucrece, 1. 435.
4. In a vase or similar vessel, that part of the drumfish (drum'fish),
as drum^, 11. n. Same
body which approximates to a cylindrical form. 4. To
attract recruits, as by the sound of thedrum-guard (drum'gard), n. A device on a
— 5. In attat. and eool. : (a) The tympanum
drum; hence, in the United States, to sue for
partizans, customers, etc. : followed by for. —
threshing-machine to prevent the operator,
or middle ear. (6) The tracheal tympanum or while feeding it, from falling into the throat,
labyrinth of a bird. See tijmpanum, 4. (c) One 5. To sound like a drum; resound. the feeder being at the top used only on Eng- :
of the tympanic organs seated in two deep This indeed makes a noise, and drums in popular ears.
lish machines.
Sir T. Browne, Religio Medici.
cavities on the first abdominal segment of cer- drumhead (drum'hed), n. 1. The membrane
tain Homoptera, and said to be used in produ- 6. To produce a sound resembling drumming stretched upon a drum, by striking which the
cing sounds. Kirby. {d) The large hollow hyoid said of partridges, blackcock, and other birds. tone is produced. Its tension and the pitch of the
bone of a howling monkey. See Mycetirue. 6. — It is done by quivering the expanded feathers tone are determined by rings or hoops fitted round the
edge of the drum-body.
A membrane drawn over a rotrnd frame, used of the wings.
2. The top part of a capstan, which is pierced
for testing the delicate edges of eye-instruments. The bird [snipe] never drummed except when on the
— with a number of holes to receive the ends of
7. A
receptacle having the form of a drimi, stoop, and whenever it performed this manoeuvre the
<iuill feathers of the wings were always expanded to their the levers or bars employed to turn it round.
or the quantity packed iu such receptacle as, a
—
8. Milit., a party accompanied
:
utmost width, so that the light could be seen between —
See capstan. 3. In anal., the membrana tym-
driitn of figs.
by a drum sent under a tlag of truce to confer
them, and quivered with a rapid, tremulous motion that
quite blurred their outlines.
pani. —
4. A vajiety of cabbage having a large
J. O. Wood, Out of Doors, p. 17L rounded or flattened head Drumhead court
with the enemy. martial. See court martial, under court.
I believe I told you of Lord John Drummond sending a To perform on a drum, as a tune. drumin, drumine (dmm'in), n. [< Drmn{mon-
trans. 1.
drum to Wade to propose a cartel.
Walpole, Letters, II. 2.
—II.
2. expel formally and accompany dii) (see def.) + -in^, -ine^.'] An alkaloid from
Milit., to
in departure with the beat of the drum often Euphorbia Drummondii, said to produce local
:
9t. [With allusion to drumming up recruits.] used figuratively, and usually followed by out: anesthesia like cocaine.
A fashionable and crowded evening party, at as, the disgraced soldier was drummed out of the
drumlin (drum'lin), n. Same as drum^, 2.
which card-playing appears to have been the regiment.
chief attraction; a rout. The more
drumly (drum'li), a. [E. dial, and Sc, also
riotous of A soldier proved unworthy was drummed out. drumblcd. Cf droumy. Perhaps altered from
.
such assemblies were styled drum-majors. Lowell, Tempora Mutantur. equiv. ME. drubly, drobly, turbid, muddy, con-
They were all three to go together to the opera, and One by one the chief actors in it [the prosecution of the nected with drublen, droblen, trouble, make
thence to Lady Thomas Hatchet's druin. Whisky Ring] were called before the lines, despoiled of
FUlding, Tom Jones. their insignia, and drummed out of the administration turbid, as water, perhaps allied to equiv. droien
All your modern entertainments, routs, drums, or as-
camp. N. A. Rev., CXXIII. 321. (see drove^), or possibly a mixture of droven
semblies. Qoldsmith, The Goddess of Silence. 3. To summon as by beat of drum. with eqtuv. trublen, troblcn, trouble. Cf. drum-
ble^, and LG. drummelig, drummig, musty, ap-
10. An afternoon tea. Also called kettledrum, But, to confound such time.
with a punning allusion to tea-kettle. 11. In — That drums him from his sport, and speaks as loud
As his own state, and ours — 'tis to lie chid
plied to gi'ain, bread, etc.] 1. Turbid; full of
grounds, dregs, or sediment dreggy muddy
ichth., a name of several seiKnoid fishes: so
; ;
dmmmer druse
[Nil., fem. pi.
head against the wood. The sound very drunkard (drung'kard),». [First in 16th cen Drupacese
(dro-pa'se-e), n. pi.
its
and -ace«p.] A
much resembles a smai-t knocking with the tury, also written drunkerd; < drunk + -ard.] of drupaceus: see drupaceous
knuckle upon the wainscoting. One given to an excessive use of strong drink name given by some botanists to that division
rosaceous plants which comprehends the al-
drumming (dmm'ing), n. The sport of fishing a person who is habitually or frequently drunk of mond, peach, cherry, plum, and similar fruit-
for dniuitish. an inebriate.
bearing trees. More generally called Amygda-
(immming:-log (drum'ing-log), ». A log to The drunkard and the glutton shall come to poverty.
Prov. xxiii. 21. leie, from Latin amygdala, almond.
which a bird, as a grouse, resorts to drum,
dnimmock (drum'ok), n. [Sc, also written Avoid the company of drunkards and busylwdies. drupaceous (dro-pa' shins), a. [< NL. drupaceus,
Jer. Taylor, Works (ed. 1835), I. 404. < drujia, a drupe see drupe, and cf. Drupacew.^
(Iniminock, dramock, drammach, etc., < Gael.
:
cooked oat-meal and cold water. drunkelewt, <'. and n. [ME. drunkelew, dron- 2. Resembling or relating to a drupe con- ;
kiliu-e, drunken, < drunken, dronken, drunken, sisting of drupes. See drupe.
To tremble uiuler Fortune's crumniock. -t- -lew, < leel. -legr = AS. -lie, E. -«y2.]
Oil scarce a bellyfu' o' drummock,
I. a. drupe (drop), n. [= F. drupe = Sp. Pg. It.
Wi' his proud, indepemlent stouiach Given to drink drunken. Chaueer.
; drupa, < NL. drupa, a drupe, < L. drupa, drup-
Could ill agree. Voide alle drunkdew folk, . . . pa (with or without olira), > LGr. ipmna, an
Burm, On a .Scotch Bard. And alle hem that vsen suche vnthriftynesse. overripe olive, < Gr. dptrnmi]^, ripened on the
Dmmmond light. Sameasca/ciu»»Z»<//i< (which And also dijs pleiera.
tree, quite ripe, a form alternating with dpvire-
Babeei Book (E. E. T. S.), p. 56.
.sec, iiiiili-i' cnlcium). TtK, ready to fall, overripe, < fipvq, tree, + rri-
n. «. A drunkard.
dmm-roomt (drum'rom), 11. The room where TTT-ecv, cook, ripen, and Tri-TTT-eiv (/ "tet), fall,
party See A yonge man to be a dronkelewe,
a drum or crowded evening is held.
Gouxr, Conf. Amant, vi. respectively.] In bot., a stone-fruit; a fruit in
drum'^, n., 9. j v which the outer part of the pericarp becomes
/^H
^
'V A
,^ [The older form of
The l«nuy housemaid begin, to repair the di«,rdered "5!!fl:t.®?ir^f ^
iyfl-„"; fleshy or softens like a berry, while the inner
Fielding, lom Jones, xl. 9. drunk, now used chielly as an 1 attributive, the
drum-room. hardens like a nut, forming a stone with a ker-
predicative use, as in senses 1 and 4, being
drum-saw (drum'sa), w. Same as cylindrical archaic or technical.] 1. Afiected by or as if nel, as the plum, cherry, apricot, and peach.
»«« (which see, under cylindric). The stone in-
by strong drink; intoxicated; drunk. closing the
dmm-sieve, «. See gicve. Drunken men imagine everything tumeth round. Bacon. kernel is call-
drum-skin (drum'skin), n. [= Dan. tromme- ed the puta-
A drumhead. He stares, he sighs, be weeps and now seems more men (or eudo-
skiiid z= Sw. trumskinn.}
With sorrow drunken than with Wine before. while carp), the
His heart J. Beaumont, Psyche, iiL 188. pulpy or more
Beat* like an iU-played drum-tUn quick and slow. Let the earth be drunken with our blood. succulent part
Library Mag., III. 801. Shak., S Hen. VI., ii. 3. is callett the
aarcocarp (or
dmmsladet, « . [Found in the 16th century, and 2. Given to drunkenness ; habitually intemper- mesocarp), and
appar. earlier; also spelled drumslet, 'drumsled ate: as, he is a drunken, worthless fellow. the outer cov-
(cited as drumsted), drombinlade, drumlade, Aton. Is not this Stephano, my drunken butler?
ering the epi-
carp. The true
drouHslate; appar. of D. or LG. origin, like Sell. He is drunk now. Shak., Tempest, v. 1.
drupe consists
drHmglager, but no corresponding form appears; 3. Proceeding from intoxication ; done in a of a single one-
cf. MD. trommeUlayh, D. trommeUlag G. trom- = state of drunkenness : as, a drunken quarrel.
celled and usu-
Drupe.
a. Section of a cherry a, fleshy
melsMag =
Dan. trommeslag =
Sw. trumsla-
When your carters, or your waiting vassals.
I. Cherries, :
allyone-seeded sarcocarp b, stony wall of the putameo, inclos-
;
knee to the heel, the leg proper, or cms, intervening Ije- and-MCT«.] 1. The8tateofbelngdnink,orover- <lrouenj; < Uh. drury, drun druery, druerir,
twecn tlie thigh and the slunk, which latter is usually
powered by intoxicants the habit of indulg- druwerie, driwerie, etcT, < OF. druerie Pr. dru- =
cut off when the fowl is dresseti for the table.
ing
;
condition he would tie good and lie came home drunk at it, a vug. A common word in Ocrnmny, adopted from
;
[North. Eng. and Scotch.]
miiluigl\,t Su7(/t, Journal to Stella, Dec. 24, 1711. the .Slavic the most important mining region of Germany
drunt (drunt), n. [Also drant, draunt; from being the Eragebirge, on the liorders of Bohcniia. 1'he
:
2. Drenched or saturated. the verb.] 1. A slow and dull tone; a drawl- word originally meant (in Slavic) brush,' and was applied
I will make mine arrows drunk with blood. ing enunciation. —
2. A fit of ))ettishnes8; the to surfaces covered with projecting crystals like teeth, just
Dent xuii. 42. dumps the huff. [North. Eng. and Scotch in as aimb has been in English. Hence it also came to mean
;
the cavities where snih druses are found to occur. In
drunk (drungk), n. l< drunk, a.] 1. A spree; both senses.] English the word dnijie is little used lit the present time
—
a drinking-bout. 2. A case of drunkenness An' Mary, nae doubt, took the drunt. except by mineralogisU, and then chiefly in the adjective
a drimken person. [Slang.] To be compared to Willie. Bums, Halloween. form drtuy (which see). See also geodt.
;; — ;
Dnisian' (dro'si-an), a. [< L. Dri(sia7itis, < He was rather a dry, shrewd kind of body. Irving. 3. To wither; parch.
J}nii!Hg (see def.).] Pertaining to Nero Clau- Mark ... is exceedingly calm his smile is shrewd
; A man of God, by Faith, first strangely dri'd.
dius Drusus, called Drusus Senior (38-9 B. c), he can say the driest, most cutting things in the quietest, Then heal'd again, that Khigs vnholy hand.
tones. Charlotte Bronte, Shirley, ix. Sylvester, tr. of Du liartas's Triumph of Faith,
stepson of the emperor Augustus, who govern- iiii. 8.
niejisure, eiinal to
— about
ed Germany Druslan foot, an ancient German long
13 English inches.
9. In painting, noting a hardness or formal
stiffness of outline, or a want of mellowness
This wasted body.
Beaten and bruis'd with arms, dri^d up with troubles.
Is good for nothing else but quiet now, sir.
Drusian- (dro'zi-an), a. [< I>rusc- + -jaw.] Of and harmony in color; frigidly precise; harsh. And holy prayers. Fletcher, Loyal Subject, i. 3.
or pertaining to the Druses. The Fall of the Angels, by F. Floris, 1554 which has ;
Cut and dried. See cut, p. o.— Dried alum. Same as
The full exposition of the Drusian creed . would some good parts, but without masses, and dry. —
burnt alum (which see, under- aium). To diy up. (a)
. .
require a volume of considerable size. Sir J. Reynolds, Journey to Flanders and Holland. To deprive wholly of moisture scorch or parch with arid-
;
Eneyc. Brit., VII. 484. No comparison can be instituted between his [Verro- ity.
chio's] dry uninspired manner and the divine style of his Their honourable men are famished, and their multi-
dmsy (dro'zi), o. [< druse^ + -i/i.] In mineral., scholar [Leonardo da Vinci]. tude dried up with thirst. Isa. v. 13.
covered or lined with very minute crystals. The C. C. Perkins, Italian Sculpture, p. 136.
(b) To evaporate completely; stop the flow of: as, the
surface of a mineral is said to be dmsy when composed
of very small prominent crystals of nearly uniform size 10. In sculp., lacking or void of luxuriousness fierce heat dried up all the streams.
as, drwsy quartz. or tenderness in form. —
11. Free from sweet- Dry up your tears, and stick your rosemary
On Shak., R. and
The dnuy, crystalline cavities of quartz and amethyst ness and fruity flavor said of wines and, by
:
this fair corse. J., iv. 5.
that enhance the beauty of the material [silicifled wood] extension, of brandy and the like, it is said also II. intrans. 1. To
lose moisture; become
BO much. Pop. Sci. Mo., XXVIII. 382. of artificially prepared wines, as champagnes, in which a
diminished amount of sweetening, or liciueur, as it is
free from moisture. —
2. To evaporate; be ex-
druve, n. [Seedrouw.] Amuddy river. Grose. called, is added, as compared with sweet wines.
haled ; lose fluidity : as, water dries away rap-
[Cumberland, Eng.] idly; blood dries quickly on exposure to the
12. In metal., noting a peculiar condition of a
druvyt, "• See drovy. Brockett. metal undergoing metallurgic treatment. The air.— To dry up. (a) To become thoroughly dry lose ;
druxy, dnixey (druk'si), a. [Also droxtj, and all moisture. (6) To be wholly evaporated ; cease to flow.
epithet is chiefly used in reference to copper which is be-
(c) To wither, as a limb, (ti) To cease talking be silent.
tormeily *drixi/,dricksie; origin obscure.] Part- ing refined. Dry copper contains a certain proportion of
;
[Low.]
ly decayed, as a tree or timber ; having decay- oxygen in combination, and to eliminate this it is subject-
ed to the process of poling. Dry up :— no, I won't dry up. I'll have my rights, if I
ed spots or streaks of a whitish color. ... so you had better dry up yourself.
die for 'em,
dry (dri), a. and n. [Early mod. E. also drie; < During the ladling out the refiner takes an assay at P. Reeves, Student's Speaker, p. 79.
short intervals, as the metal is liable to get out of pitch,
ME. drye, drie, dri, drige, dryge, druyc, etc., <
or become dry, as under-poled copper is termed. dryad (dn'ad), n. [= D. G. Dan. dryade = Sw.
AS. dryge, drige,orig. *driige D. droog ML(}. = = Eiiajc. Brit., VI. 350. dryad = F. dryade = Sp. driade, driada = Pg.
droge, druge, LG. dreuge, drog, drege, dree, dry; dryas = It. driada, driade, < L. dryas (dryad-),
13. In American jiolitical slang, of or belong-
allied to OS. drukno, drokno, adv., druknian, v., < Gr. ipvd( (dpvad-), a wood-nymph, < Spl(, a
ing to the Prohibition party in favor of or
make dry, =
OHG. trucchan, trocchan, MHG. adopting prohibition of the sale or use of intoxi-
;
dry wood ; dry bones. siderable time before being used to make a negative or Singest of summer in full-throated ease.
a positive picture. Various processes for preparing dry Keats, Ode to a Nightingale.
When 'tis fair and dry Weather North of the Equator, plates have been experimented with almost since the ear-
'tis blustering and rainy Weather .South of it. liest diffusion of photography ; but most of these processes
Knock at the rough rind of this ilex-tree, and summon
Dumpier, Voyages, II. iil. 77. forth the Dryad. Hawthorne, Marble Faun, ix.
afforded plates of very uncertain quality, slow in opera-
It is a very dry country, where they have hardly any tion, and exceedingly tmreliable in their property of keep- 2. In a kind of dormouse, Myoxus dryas.
zoiil.,
other supply but from the rain water.
Pococke, Description of the East, II.
ing. Dry plates have comparatively recently come into
general use, in great measure superseding the old wet
Dryades (dri'a-dez), «. pi. [NL.] group of A
ii. 136.
plates, owing to the adoption of gelatin as a medium for
butterflies, named from the genus Dryas. Hiih-
Upon the reading of this letter, there was not a dry eye the sensitizing agent (bromide of silver), which is formed ner, 1816.
in the club. Addison, Spectator, No. 617. into an emulsion with the gelatin, and spread in a thin
film upon some support, as glass, paper, or metaL
dryadic (dn-ad'ik), a. [< dryad -jc] Of or +
Nor vainly buys what Gildor sells. Such pertaining to dryads.
Poetic buckets for dry wells. plates require a remarkably short exposure to make a
M. Green, The Spleen. picture, are very convenient to handle, since the operator He could hear the woods declaiming in vibrant periods,
although he could translate none of these dryadic tones
Specifically — 2. In geol. from and mining, free
can make a number of exposures at one time and place,
and can perform the chemical operations of development, that came from the trees. The Atlantic, LXI. 669.
the presence or use of water, or distant from etc., at his convenience, weeks afterward, if necessary, at
Dryandra (dri-an'dra), «. [NL., named after
water: as, dry diggings; dry separation. 3. — any other place, instead of being forced, as with wet
Jonas Dryander, a Swedish-English botanist
Not giving milk: as^ a dry cow. 4. Thirsty; — plates, to finish his picture at once. Moreover, the gela-
tin film is so tough that it is hardly necessary to varnish (1748-1810).] A large genus of Australian
craving drink, especially intoxicating drink. a dry-plate picture, as is indispensable with the tender shrubs, natural order Proteacto?, with hard, dry,
None so dry or thirsty will touch one drop of it. collodion film and these plates can be prepared conmier-
. . .
;
evergreen, generally serrated leaves, and com-
cially at small cost and of even quality. Their chief defect
Shak., T. of the 8., v. 2.
is that they cannot, as now made, be trusted to keep un-
pact cylindrical clusters of yellow flowers. A
Believe me, I am dry with talking ; here, boy, give us impaired in warm, damp weather, while unexposed or un- few species are occasionally cultivated in green-
here a l)ottle and a glass.
developed, unless carefully protected from the air (in air-
Cotton, in Walton's Angler, houses.
ii. 259. tight boxes). —Dry process. See process. Dry season, — Dryas (dri'as), n. [NL., < L. dryas, a dryad:
I suspected nothing but that he had rode till he was dry. a fishing season during whicli tish are scarce. [Local, New
Walpole, Letters, II. 346. England.] — Dry service. See dry mans, under massi. see dryad.'] 1. A
small genus of rosaceous
5. Barren; jejune; destitute of interest; in-
— Dry way, a method of assaying by tlie aid of fire, or in plants, found in alpine and arctic regions of the
a furnace or nmffle the opposite of assaying in the humid
;
northern hemisphere. They are small prostrate
capable of awakening emotion : as, a dry style way, when the conil)ination to be assayed, or, more prop- shrubs with large white or yellow fiowers, followed by a
a dry subject ; a dry discussion. erly, analyzed, exists in solution, or in the liquid form. number of long feather-awned achenes. The mountain
As one then in a dreanie, whose dryer braine High and dry. See AiirA.-To boll dry. See6ot(2. avens, D. octopetala, is amphigean, and from it the arctic
Is tost with troubled sights and fancies weake, n. n.; pi. dries (driz). 1. A
place where D. inteyri/olia is hardly distinct. The only other species,
He mumbled soft, but would not all his silence breake. things are dried; a drying-house. D. DrtnnmoTidii, is peculiar to the Rocky Mountains of
Spenser, i\ Q., I. i. 42. British America.
In the tanks it [clay] is allowed to settle until it acquires
Their discourses from the pulpit are generally dry, me- a thick creamy consistency, when it is transferred to the 2. In entom.: (a) A
genus of butterflies, of
thodical, and unatfecting. Goldsmith, English Clergy. drying-house or dry. Kncyc. Brit., XIV. 1. which D. paphia is the type and sole species.
Long before he reached manhood he knew how to baffle 2. In American political slang, a member of (6) Another genus of butterflies. Also called
curiosity by dry and guarded answers.
Macaiday, Hist. Eng., vil. the Prohibition party. —
3. In masonry, a fis-
Aculhua. Hiibtier, 1816; Felder, 1865.
dry-as-dust (dri'as-dusf), a. and n. [That is,
Macaulay'8 memory, like Niebuhr's, undoubtedly con- sure in a stone, intersecting it at various angles
founded not infrequently inference and fact it exagger- to its bed and rendering it unfit to support a dry as dust; used as the name of "Dr. Dryas-
;
ated it gave, not what was in the book, but what a vivid
; load. dust," the feigned editor or introducer of some
imagination inferred from the book. Sir George Lewis
dry (dri), V. ; pret. and pp. dried, ppr. drying. of Scott's novels, and by later -writers in allu-
had none of this defect ; his memory was a dry memory, sion to this character.] I. a. Very dry or un-
just as his mind was a dry light if he said a thing was at
;
[< ME. dryen, drien, drigen, drygen, etc., < AS.
page 10, you might be sure it was at page 10. drygan, drigan, tr., dry, drugian, intr., become interesting; prosaic.
W. Hac/ehot, On Sir O. C. Lewis. dry (= D. droogen =
LG. drdgen, driigen, dry), That sense of large human power which the mastery
over a great ancient language, itself the key to a magnifi-
6t. Severe; hard: as, a dry blow. (.dryge, dry: see dry, a.] I. tran^. 1. To make cent literature, gave, and which made scholarship then a
Dro. S. I pray you eat none of it [meat]. dry ; free from water or from moisture of any passion, while jvith us it has almost relapsed into an anti-
Ant. S. Your reason? kind, and by any means, as by wiping, evapo- quarian dry-as-dust pursuit.
Dro. S. Lest It make you choleric, and purchase me an- ration, exhalation, or drainage; desiccate: as, R. //. Ilutton, Modern Guides of English Thought, p. 193.
other dry basting. Shak., C. of E., ii. 2.
to dry the eyes; to dry hay; 'svind dries the So much of the work is really admirable that one the
If I should have said no, I should have given him the more regrets the large proportion of the trivial and the
He, uncle, and so have deserved a dry beating again. earth ; to dry a meadow or a swamp. dryasdust. Athenceum, No. 3084, p. 739.
Ford, 'Tis Pity, ii. 6. After drie hem in the Sonne, a nyghtes
Leve hem not tliroute, and then in places colde H. n. A
dull, dry, prosaic person.
7. Lacking in cordiality; cold: as, his answer Lette bonge hem uppe. Not a mere antiquarian dryasdust.
was very snort and dry. Palladius, Husbondrie (E. E. T. S.),p. 117. British Quarterly Rev., LXXXIII. 17a.
dry-beat 1785 Dryolestes
within the inner cylinder, and the machine is then made sensibility in devotion; want of ardor; as, dryness of
dry-beatf (dri'bet), r. t. To beat (a thing) till
to rotate with great velocity, when, by the action of cen- spirit. ((0 In paintinij, harshness and formality of out-
it becomes dry ; hence, to beat severely.
trifugal force, the water escapes through tlie lioles. The line, or want of mellowness and harmony in color, (e)
1 will dry-beat you with an iron wit. action of the drying-maclline is the same in principle as In sctUp., want of tenderness in form.
Shak., R. auJ J., Iv. 5. that witnessed when a person trundles a mop to dry it. dry-nurse (dri'ners), ». 1. A nurse who at-
Rng, Xot one word more, my maids break off, break off. ;
Also called extractor.
tends and feeds a child, but does not suckle it.
Biron. By heaven, all dry-beaten with pure scoff !
Shak., L. L. L., V. 2.
drying-off (dri'ing-of), n. The process by
wnich an amalgam of gold is evaporated, as in
Compare wet-nurse. —
2. One who stands to an-
other in a relation somewhat similar; hence, es-
He by dry-beating him mi^lit make him at least sensible gilding.
of blcjws. Jer. Taylor, Works (ed. 1835), I. S;J4. pecially, an inferior who instructs his superior
drying-plate (dri'ing-plat), n. One of a series in his duties. [Slang.]
dry-bone (dri'bdn), n. In mining, the ore of of frames in a malt-kiln, covered with woven
zinc, chiefly the silicate, which occurs, mixed Grand caterer and dry-nurse of the Church. Cowper.
wire, and placed one over the other, so that
with lead ore, in the mines of the upper Missis- the hot air from the flues beneath may ascend dry-nurse (dri'ners), v.t. 1. To feed, attend,
sippi lead re^on. through them and dry malt placed in them, and bring up without suckling. 2. To in- —
dry-boned (dri'bond), a. Having dry bones; drying-tube (dn'ing-tub), ». A tube filled struct in the duties of a higher rank or position
without Hesh. Imp. Diet. with some material having a great avidity for than one's own. [Slang.]
dry-castor (dri'kas'tor), ». species of bea- A moisture, such as calcium When a superior officer does not know his duty, and is
ver. Sometimes c&WeA parchment-bearer, chlorid, sulphuric acid, or instructed in it by an inferior ofticer, he is said to be dry-
dry-cup (dri'kup), r. t. To apply the cupping- phosphoric anhydrid, and used nursed. The inferior nurses the superior as a dry-nurse
rears an infant. Brewer.
glass to without scarification. to dry a cxirrent of gas which
£y-cupping (dri'kup'ing), n. See cupping. is passed through it, or to Dryobalanops (dri-o-bal'a-nops), n. [NL., <
dry-Ctire (ili-i'kiir), r. t. To cure (fish, meat, retain the moisture evolved Gr. (!pi«,iu>.ai'of, an acorn (< Spvq, a tree, esp.
hides, etc.) by salting and drying, as distin- from a substance so that it the oak, -1- (ia^Mvoq, an acorn or any similar
guished from pickling. can be weighed. fruit), + uTp, face, appearance.] small ge- A
£y-ditcht (dri'dich), i'. t. To labor at without Dryininae (dn-i-ni'ne), ». pi.
result, as one who digs a ditch in which no [NL., < l>ryinus + -ina.'] A
water will flow. subfamily of parasitic hyme-
There would be no end to repeat with how many quar- nopterous insects, of the fam-
rels this unfttrtunate Bishop was pruvok"d, yet his adver- ily Froctotrupidw, founded by
saries did but dry-ilitck tlieir matters, and digged in vain,
though they still cast up earth.
Drying-tube. Haliday in 1840. They are dis-
Bp. Uaekel, Abp. Williams, iL 98. tinguished by having a tongue-like
addition to the hind wings, or, when the wings are want-
dry-dock (dii'dok), n. See dock^. ing in the female, by enlarged raptorial front feet. The
dryer, «. See
drier. wingless species resemble ants.
dry -eyed (dri'id), a. Tearless; not weeping. Dryinus (dri'i-nus), n. [NL. (Latreille, 1804),
si;.'ht so deform what heart of rock could loiif; < Gr. dpvtvoi (of a tree, esp. of the oak) (= E.
Dni ei/.'d behold? MUton, p. L., xi. 495. treen), < ipvc, a tree, the oak: see dryad.'] 1.
In entom., the typical genus of I>ryinin<e, hav-
dry-fatt (dri'fat), n. Same as dry-vat.
ing the vertex impressed and the wings ample.
diy-flstt (dri'flst), n. A niggardly person. Ford.
It is wide-spread, and the species appear to be parasitic
dry-fisted (dri'fis'ted), a. Niggardly. upon leaf-hoppers. D. alriventrui of North America is an
lirit-Jitted patrons. example.
Newtt/rom Pamastus.
2. In herpet., a genus of whip-snakes, of the
dryfoot (dri'fut), adr. foot, dru
[< ME. drye
family Dryophidte, distinguished from Dryophis
fot, drtii fot, drigefot, adverbial aeo. ; AS. dat.
(which see) by having smooth instead of keeled
pi. drygum Jotum, on dry feet.] 1. With dry
feet; on dry land. —
2. In the manner of a
scales. J/errcm, 1820; Wagler.
+
dog which piursues game by the scent of the dryly, drily (dri'li), adc. [< dry -lyK] 1.
foot.
without moisture.
It looks ill, it eats drily; marry, 'tis a withered pear.
A hound that nuu coanter, and yet drawi dry-foot well. SAo*., Alls Well, L 1.
Shak., C. of E., Iv. 2.
My old muter intends to follow my young master, dry- 2. Without embellishment; without anything
/<Kit. over Moorflelds to Ixjndon. to enliven, enrich, or entertain. Flowerijig Branch of Cajnphor-trec Dryebalanofs arofna/t'ea).
{
Hi hone* were laden on the beach near Benacre with 6.With apparently unintentional or sly hu-
dry ffoodt, and on the aoth of the same month 40
. . . mor or sarcasm.
horses were laden with dry yood* at Kartley by riders well Drymodes (dri-mo'dez), «. [NL. (Gould, 1840),
armed. Rep. of llotue o/ Commont on Smugfflinff, 1745.
< <ir. ApvfiudrK, woody (of the wood), < dpv/ioc, a
dry-house (dri'hous), n. Same as drying-house. coppice, wood, an oak-coppice (< dpv^, a tree,
To twive woollen )>o)>)iins and shape after
retain their size esp. the oak), +
fi(5of, form.] A
genus of Aus-
they are put int^j a hot mill, tlie wood moat be thoroughly tralian turdoid passerine birds. Its position is
seasoned In a good, well heated dry house.
Maart/aeturer^ Rev., XX. 217.
uncertain ; by some it is referred to a family
Timeliida;. Also written Drymaaedus.
drying [Ppr. of dry, r.] 1. Serv-
(dri'ing). a.
ing to diy; adapted to exhaust moisture: as, a Drymoeca (dn-me'kft), n. [NL. (Drymoica —
drying wind or day. —
2. Having the quality of
Swainson, 1827), < Gr. dpvp6c, a coppice, +
rapidir becoming dry and hard: as, a drying
oucof, house, > o'lKeiv, dwell.] 1. genus of A
small dentirostral oscine passerine birds, con-
oil. See inl.
taining numerous characteristic African spe-
drying-box (dn'ing-boks), n. In photog., an cies known as grans-tcarblers : now commonly
oven or a <'iipl)oard neated by a gas- or oil-stove,
or otherwise, and used to dry and harden gela-
merged in Cisticola. 2. [J. c] — member of A
this genus.
tin plates, phototypes, et«.
Also Drymoica.
drying-case (dri'ing-kas), ». copper case A Drymomys (drim'o-mis), n. [NL. (Tschudi,
inclosed in a bot-water chamber, employed in
l,s4r)), < dr. Spv/id^, a coppice, -I- //iif, a mouse.] Great Black Woodpeclcer {Dryocpfiuj martius).
drying tissues and hardening balsam prepara-
tions for tlio microscope.
A notable genus of South American sipmodont
rodents, of the family Muridai and subfamily woodpecker of Europe, Dryocopus martius, is
drying-chamber (dri'ing-cham'btr), n. See Murinee, They have the upper lip cleft, the ears large,
elm mill r.
the type. This bird one of the largest of Its tribe,
Is
the tail long and scaly, the lncis<jrs furrowed on the sides, black with a scarlet crest, and resembles somewhat the
drying-floor (dri'inp-flor), n. See floor. and the molars small, the flrst of them with S pairs of tu- Ivory-billed and pileated woodpeckers of the I'nited States.
drying-house (dri'ing-bous), n. A building, bercles, the second with 2 pairs, and the third with 1 pair. It inhabits northerly portions of Europe. Bote, 1826.
room, eatablidbments of many different
etc., in dry-multure (dri'mul'tur), «. In iScots laio, a 2. A genus of South American tree-creepers.
kinds, as gunpowder-works, dye-houses, fruit- sum of money or quantity of com paid yearly Also Dendrocincla. Maximilian, 1831.
drying establishments, etc., where goods orma- to a mill, whether those liable in the payment Dryodromas
(dri-od'ro-mas), n. [NL. (Hart-
^ terials are dried in an artificially raised tem- grind their grain at the mill or not. See tliirl- laiib and Finsch,
1869), < Gr. Spvc, a tree, esp.
perature a drying-chamber. Abo dry-house,
;
age. the oak, -t- fipopa^, running, < Spapelv, run,] A
drijinii-ronm. dryness (dri'nes), n. [Formerly also driness; genus of African warblers, the dryodromes, as
drying-machine (dri'ing-ma-shen'), n. Ama- < ME. drynesse, < AS. drygnes, drignes, etc., < 1). fulricnpilla of South Africa.
chine uscil in bleaching, dyeing, and laundry dryge, dry: see dry and -ness.] The character or dryodrome (dn'o-drom), «. bird of the genus A
establishments, consisting of two concentric —
state of being dry. Specifically (o) Freedom from Dryodrrnnas.
drums or cylinders, one within the other, open moisture; lackof water or other fluid; aridity; arldness.
(fi) Barrenness; Jejuneness; want of that which interests,
Diryolestes (dri-o-les'tez), n. [NL., < Gr. ('piT,
at th<! top, and having the inner cylinder per- enlivens, or entertains: as, the drynesn of style or expres- a tree, esp. the oak, -I- Iriarr/^, a robber.] A
forated with holes. The goods to be dried are placed sion the dryness of a subject,
; (c) Want of feeling or genus of fossil pantotherian mammals of the
; : ;
. ;:
are oval and exposed, the wings and tail rounded and of commercial writings : as, a bill payable at 10 dualist (du'a-list), n. [= F. dualiste = Sp. Pg.
about equal lengths, and the tarsi scutellate. The plu- It. dualista = D. Dan. Sw. dualist; as dual +
d/s. (that is, ten days after sight).
mage of the back and rump is extremely fluffy ; the colora- One who holds the doctrine of dualism
tion is black and white, sometimes with an ochraceous D. Sc. An
abbreviation of Doctor of Science. -ist.]
tinge but without any bright colors, and is alike in both dso, n. [E. Ind.] valuable hybrid between A in any of its forms an opponent of monism
;
sexes. Also called Hapalonotu^, Chawtuyiiotus, and Rhyn- the yak and the common cow. Encyc. Brit., especially, one who admits the existence both
chantatng.
XIV. 197. of spirit and of matter. Craig.
dry-point (dri' point), n. and a. I. re. 1. A D-string (de'string), re. The third string on dualistic (dii-a-lis'tik), a. [= F. dualistiquc (cf.
steel instrument or etching-needle with a sharp
the vioUn, and the second on most other in- D. G. dualistisch
— Dan. Sw. dualistisk) ; as du-
point, used by etchers to cut delicate lines on
struments played with a bow ; the third string alist + -ic. ] 1 Consisting of two ; characterized .
Drypta (di-ip'ta), n. [NL. (Fabricius, 1801), ir- in gram., expressing two, as distinguished from alis, dual see dual.] The state of being two,
reg. < Gr. dph-zTtiv (?), tear, strip.] A genus of singular, expressing one, and from plural, ex- or of being di-vided into two; twofold division :
adephagous beetles, of the family Carabidce. pressing more than two. The languages of our fam- or character; twoness.
They are of small size and slend'er, graceful form. There ily originally had a dual number, both in declension and in
are 20 to 30 species, confined to the old world, especially Tliis dualitie after determission is founden in euery
conjugation ; it is preserved in Sanskrit and Gfreek, and
well repj;esenteti in the East Indies and Africa only 2 are ; creature, be it neuer so single of onhed.
less fully in other tongues, as Gothic. Dual forms also Testament of Love, ii.
European. D, rnurffinata of Europe is the type. occur in other families.
Dryptidaet (drip'ti-de), n. pi. [NL. (Laporte, 2. Composed or consistingof two parts, quali- Though indeed they be really divided, yet are they so
Drypta + -idee.] Afamilyof Coleoptera,
1834), < ties,or natures, which may be separately con-
united as they seem but one, and make rather a duaiity
than two distinct souls.
named from the genus Drypta, now merged in sidered twofold binary ; dualistic as, the
; ; : Sir T. Browne, Eeligio Medici, iL 6.
Carabidce. dual nature of man, spiritual and corporeal. To the schoolmen the duality of the universe appeared
dry-rent (dri'rent), n. In laic, a rent reserved Faint glimpses of the dual life of old. under a different aspect.
without clause of distress. Inward, grand with awe and reverence outward, mean Huxley, Nineteenth Century, XXI. 192.
A
;
dryrihedt, »»• false spelling of drearihead. and coarse and cold. Whittier, Garrison of Cape Ann. The principle of duality, in rjeom., the principle that
dry-rot (dri 'rot), «. 1. A
decay affecting II. n. In gram., the nupiber relating to two
in any pro]iosition not involving measure, if for "point"
be everywhere substituted '-plane," and vice versa, the
timber, occasioned by various species of fun- the dual number. latter proposition will be as true as the former.
gi, the mycelium of
The employment of a dual for the pronouns of the first Upon this supposition of a positive curvature, the whole
which penetrates the and second persons marks an early date. of geometry is far more complete and interesting ; the
timber, destroying Genesis and Exodus i^. E. T. S.), Pref., p. xiv. principle of duality, instead of iialf breaking-down over
metric relations, applies to all propositions without ex-
it. Potyporux hyhridus
causes the dry-rot of oak-
dualin (dii'a-lin), n. [< dual, of two, -i»2.] + ception. W. K. Clifford, Lectures, I. 323.
built ships Meruliua la-
;
A mixture of 30 parts of fine sawdust, 20 of
(dii'an), re. duan
[< Gael, duan, a poem, canto,
cryiiums is the most com- saltpeter, and 50 of nitroglycerin, used as an
mon and roost formida- explosive. Also called dualin-dynamite. ode, song, ditty, oration, Ir. duan, a poem, =
Cf. Ir. duar, a word, saying, duas, a
ble dry-rot fungus, found
chiefly in fir- and pine-
dualism (da'a-lizm), «. [= F. dualisme Sp. song. =
division of a poem; a canto; also, a A
wood. Polyporus destruc-
Dry-rot Fungus {Merulius tacry-
fftans).
Pg. It. dualismo =
D. G. dualismus =Dan. dua- poet.]
poem or song. Burns; Byron.
tor is common in Ger- lisme =
Sw. dualism; a.s dual -ism.'] +
1. Divi-
many. Damp, unventilated situations are most favorable sion into two; a twofold division; duality. duarcby (du'ar-ki), re.; pi. duarchies (-kiz).
to the development of dry-rot fungi. Dry wood is not [Prop. *dyarchy, < Gr. dvo, =: E. two,
An inevitable dualism bisects nature, so that each thing < apxeiv, rule.] Government by two persons;
-apx'", +
attacked. Various methods have been proposed for the
is a half, and suggests another thing to make it whole as,
prevention of dry-rot; that most in favor is to thoroughly :
saturate the wood with creosote, which makes it unfit for spirit, matter ; man, woman odd, even ; subjective, ob-
;
diarchy (which see).
vegetation. (See A:yanizi?i*7.) Animal dry-rot is also found jective in, out upper, under motion, rest yea, nay. . .
; ; ;
Siam is practically a monarchy, although nominally a
;
to be occasioned by the attack of fungi. The same dualism underlies the nature and condition of duurehy, the second king hardly holding the power of a
man. Emerson, Compensation. vice-king. Harper's Weekly, XXVIII. 330.
2. Figuratively, a concealed or unsuspected in-
ward deoajf or degeneration, as of public mor- 2. In philos., in general, that way of thinking dubi (dub), pret. and pp. dubbed, ppr.
V. t.;
als or public spirit. which seeks to explain all sorts of phenomena dubbing. [< ME.
dubben, rarely dohben, doub-
dry-ruD (dri' rub), v. t. To make clean by rub- by the assumption of two radically independent hen, dub (also in comp. adubben : see aduh), <
bing without wetting. and absolute elements, without any continuous late AS. "duhban (only once in pret. dubbade
dry-salt (dri' salt), v. t. To cure (fish, meat, gradation between them opposed to monism. : " Se oyng [William the Conqueror] dubbade his
hides, etc. ) by salting and drying dry-cure. ;
In particular, the term is applied (a) To the doctrine
that spirit and matter exist as distinct substances, thus
— sunn Henric to ridere," the king dubbed his
drysalter (dri'sal'tfer), «. [< dry-salt, v., + being opposed both to idealism and to materialism. son Henry a knight) (whence the equiv. Icel.
eri.] If. A dealer in salted or dried meats, Berkeley then is right in triumphing over Realism and dubba til riddara, Sw. dubba till riddare; Icel.
pickles, sauces, etc. Dualunn. Kight in saying that if lie were to accord them dubba, also, equip with arms, dress), < OF.
dub 1787 dubitative
Attorney-General, was restless and du-
comp. adouher, ado- dnb^ (dub), n. [E. dial, and Sc. see *62.] A
Wedderbum, the
'doitber, "doher, duher, in :
bious, and was anxious to oblige the Chief Justice of Com-
ber. aduber, adubber, adoubber, adobber, equip puddle a small pool of foul, stagnant water. ;
mon Pleas to retire, in order that he might obtain his place.
with arms, invest with armor, dress, prepare, They rudely ran with all their might, Lecky, Eng. in 18th Cent., xiv.
repair, adjust, mod. F. adoubir, adjust (a piece Spared neither dud nor mire.
2. Doubtful ; marked by or occasioning doubt
Bebin Hood and the Beggar (CUUs Ballads, V. 196).
in chess), adouber, radoubcr, repair (a ship, etc.) or uncertainty ; diflieult to determine or relieve
Tarn skelplt on thro' dub and mire.
(= Sp. adobar, prepare, dress, pickle, cook, tan, Despising wind, and rain, and fire.
of uncertainty; not distinct or plain; puzzling:
et«. (hence Sp. and E. adobe), OPg. adubar = Surns, Tam o' Shanter. as, a dubious question; a dubious light.
= addobbare, dress, deck, adorn; so ML.
It. Sometimes the manner of speaking, even concerning
adobare, equip with arms, invest with armor,
dub-a-dub (dub'a-dub'). [Seedu62. Ct. rub-a- common things, is dark and dubious.
dub.] An imitation of the sound of a drum. Bp. Atterbury, Sermons, II. ix.
dub as knight, dress, repair, adorn, etc.), < a-, See second extract under dritm^, 1.
L. (id-, to, + douber, duber, adjust, arrange. For dubious meanings learn'd polemics strove,
O^gasfl do Da:
dubasb (do'bash), «. Same as dohhash. And wars on faith prevented works of love.
repair, prob. of OLG. origin, meaning orig.
•strike' (whence, in two independent appliea-
aUDD i,uuu;, «. [Ar. (>Pers.)du6&, abear.] A Crabbe, Works, I. 147.
Syrian bear. Looked to it probably as a means of solving a dubious
tious, (a) 'strike, give the accolade,' with refer- ."l"?^^'/?!?; Ferd. and Isa., xvi.
""f""*"
dubbeh i<mn
(dub'e),
> «. [Ar. ddbba.'} The mod- problem. Prescott,
ueetothatpartof the ceremony of knighting,
ern Egyptian name of the common wooden The world is full of hopeful analogies and handsome du-
.vhence, in general, equip with arms, invest bious eggs called possibilities.
lock used in Cairo and elsewhere in the East.
with armor, dress, adorn, etc., and (6) 'strike, It has a square bolt of wood, sometimes as much as two
George Eliot, Middleniarch, I. 91.
beat, dress, prepare,' in various mechanical feet long, in which are a numl>er of holes arranged in a 3. Of uncertain event or issue: as, a dubious
uses; not found in ME.); cf. OF. dober, dauber, pattern ; a movable block, above and resting upon the undertaking.
beat, swiuge, thwack (In part identical with lK)lt,has iron pcfis corresponding to the holes in the bolt.
The key, also of wood, has also pegs or pins by means of His utmost power with adverse power opposed
dober, dauber, piaster, daub: see daub); < East which the pins of the lock ai-e pushed up, allowing the bolt In dubious battel on the plains of heaven,
Fries, dubba, beat, slap (Koolman), OSw. = to Klide. Also spelled
^ dahbeh. And shook his throne. Milton, P. L., 1. 104.
dubba, strike (Ihre), appar. orig. in part imita- dxxbber^t, «• A furbisher of old clothes. York 4. Liable to doubt or suspicion; of doubtful
tive; cf. dub^. Cf. also <ta6l.] 1. To strike Plnus, Int., p. Ixxv. quality or propriety ; questionable as, a man :
with a sword in the ceremony of making one dubber^ (dub'fer), n. [Bepr. Gujerati dabaro of dubious character; a dubious transaction;
a knight; hence, to make or designate as a (cerebral d), a leathern vessel, bottle, etc.] In his morals or his methods are dubious. =Syzi. 1.
knight ; invest with the knightly character. India, a large leathern vessel made of imtanned Unsettled, undetermined.— 2. Doubtful, Ambiguous, etc.
He lokede hide of the buffalo or the goat, and used for (see obscure, a.); questionable, prolilematical, puzzling.
As is the kynde of a knyght that cometh to be doubed. holding oil, ghee, etc. Also written dupper. dubiously (du'bi-us-li), adv. Doubtftilly ; un-
Piers Plowman (C), xxL 11. certainly; questionably.
Did they not hoil their Butter it would be rank, but af-
He. [the Xayro) Is dul/bed or created by the king, who For first, Albertus Magnus speaks dubiously, confessing
ter it lias passed the Fire they kept it in Duppers, the year
commaundeth to gird him with a sword, and laying his round. Fryer, East India and Persia, p. 118. he could not confirm the verity hereof.
ri>!ht hand vjion his head, muttereth certaine wordeg soft- Sir T. Browne, Vulg. Err., iii. 5.
ly, and afterward dubbeth him. dubbing (dub'ing), n. [< ME. dubbing, dob-
(dii'bi-us-nes), n. 1. The state of
Purchat, Pilgrimage, p. 495. bijng ; verbal n. of daftl, ».] 1. The act of dubiousness
The king stood up under his cloth of state, took the making a knight ; the accolade. being dubious, or inclined to doubt; doubtful-
sworil from the lord protector, and dubbed the lord mayor ness.
Uayminl. A prince longeth for to do
of Londou knight The gode knistes dobbyng. She [Minerva) speaks with the dubiousness of a man,
Shoreham, Poems, note.
not the certainty of a Goddess. Pope, Odyssey, i.,
Moiuieur Mingo for qnafflng doth •orpaa*, p. 15,
In cup, or can, or glass; The dubbyng of my dlngnite may nojt be done downe, 2. Uncertainty; the quality of being difficult
God Bacchus do me right.
Nowdlr with dnke nor duzeperes, my dedis are so dreste. to determine, or open to doubt or question : as,
And dub mo knight York Play; p. 219.
Domingo. the dubiousness of a problem.
Niuh, Summer's Lut Will and Testament 2t. Dress; ornament; trappings. Let us therefore at present acquiesce in the dubiousness
catch, a scrap of which is also put into the mouth of
Bis corown and his kinges array of their antiquity. J. Philips, Splendid Shilling, Ded.
(TUs And his dubbing he did oway.
SneDoe Id Shakxpere's 2 ileury IV., v. 3, alludes to a con-
Holy Rood (E. E. T. 8.), p. 130. dubitable (du'bi-ta-bl), a. [< OF. dubitable =
TiTial ciutoni, according tu which he who drank a large =
potation of wine or i>tber liquor, on his knees, to the health 3. The act of striking, cutting, rubbing, or
Sp. dubitable =
Pg" dubitavcl It. dubitabile, <
of his mistress, was jocularly said to lie dubbed a knight, li. dubitabilis, < dubitare, doubt: see dubitate,
dressing, so as to make smooth or otherwise Liable to be doubted doubts ; un-
and retained his title for the evening.) dotibt, u.] ;
Hence — 2. To confer a new character or any adapted to a pur])Ose. (a) Dressing by means of an
adz. (6) Kubbing with grease, as leather when being cur-
certain.
dignity or name upon ; entitle ; speak of its.
ried. .See dipping, 4. (c) Raising a nap on cloth by means
All the did}itable hazards
Of fortune. Middleton, Game at Chess, ilL 1.
O Poet thou had'st been discreeter, . . . of teazels.
:
Dettruetion of Troy (E. E. T. 8.X L 1083. ing or smoothing off an irregular surface an dubitare, doubt see doubt, v.] To doubt hesi-
;
: ;
And alle tho Kobes ben orfrayed alleabout«n, and duUed adz. tate. [Bare.]
falle of preciooa Stonea and ol grete oryent Perles, fulle dubh. [Ir. and Gael., black. See dAu.] See If, for example, he were to loiter dubitating, and not
richely. MandevOU, TraveU, p. 233. ^^|^,^ come if he were to come, and fail.
;
4. Tostrike, cut, rub, or dress so as to make dubhash (de'bash), n. Same as dobhash. Carlyle, French Rev., I. iv. 1.
smooth, or of an equal surface, (o) To cut down or dubiety (du-bl'e-ti), n. [=: Sp. dubicdad Pg. =
How largely his statements are to be depended on, I
nduce with an adz. dubkdade= It. dubbirU), dubbietade, dubbietate. more than merely dubitate.
Lowell, Biglow Papers, 2d sen, p. 7.
If I wanted a board, I had no other way bnt to cut down a < h. duhietait-)^ < f/uWiM, doubtful: see rfuW-
edge hi'fore me, and hew It flat on either
tree, set it on an edge I
ous.] Doubtfulness dubiousness. ; dubitatingly (du'bi-ta-ting-li), adv. Hesitat-
aide with ray axe, till I had brought It to be as thin as a inglv. Carlyle.
Astate of dubiety and suspense is ever accompanied by
plank, and then dub it smooth with my adze. De Foe, OF. and P.
nneaslness. Hiehardton, dubitation (du-bi-ta'shon), n. [<
b) To nib with grease, as leather when lieing curried, (c) The twilight of dubiety never falhi upon a Scotchman. dubitation, =
Pr. dubitaiio =
Sp. dubitacion =
^o ralaa a nap on, as cloth, by striking it with teazels, (d)
?.
To cat aff the comb and wattles, and si^mctlmes the ear-
Lamb, Imperfect Sympathies. Pg. dubita^do =
It. dubitazione, < L. duhita-
lobca ol (a game-cock) ; trim, (e) To dress (a flshlng-llyX Had the antagonist left dubiety. tio{n-), < dubitare, doubt: see dubitate, douhfl.']
Here were we proving murder a mere myth. "The act or state of doubting; doubt; hesitation.
Some dub the Oak-fly with black wool, and
Isabella-col- Browning, Ring and Book, II. 75. In the scholastic disputations, dubitation was the condi-
oured mohair, and bright brownish bear's hair, warped on ,J- X.. f i-\ J 7,- -J.- / f \
1
duWosity (du-bl-08 l-ti), n.; p\.dubwgittes{-tiz). tion of a disputant who had pronounced a matter to be
with yellow ilik. /. rotom. Complete Angler, p. 106, note.
doubtful and was Ijound to sustain that ixisition.
It no time to be dubbing when yon ought to be fishing. r= It. dubbiogttd, dubbiosilade, dubbiositate, <
Is Dubitation Is the beginning of all Knowledge.
R. B. Bootenelt, Game Fish, p. 266. L. as if 'dubiogitd(t-)a, < duhiosus, dubious: see
To dub out, bring oat (a surface) to a
in ptaater-vpork, to dubious.']1. Dubiousness; doubtfulness. — 2. The ordinary effects
Howell, Letters,
might for' ever after be con-
. . .
I. v. 20.
'evcl plane by pieces of wood, tiles, slate, plaster, or the Something doubtful. fidently expected, without any dubitation.
Men often awaUow falsities for troths, dubiontiet for Jer. Taylor, Works (ed. 1835), I. 255.
Bb^ (dnb), V. {.; pret. and pp. dubbed, ppr. certainties. Sir T. Broume, Vulg. Err.
In states of dubitation under impelling elements, the in-
dubUng. [Prob. orig. 'strike' (see dutA). but dubious (du'bi-us), o. [= It. dubbioso, < LL stinct pointing to courageous action is, besides the man-
in duh-a-ilub, rub-a-dub, considered imitutiye,
~
,;„/,jo,f„j, an
iininiAiiw, dw
u. dubiUS
extension of L.
iuic<.i/cuuiuuuL "
OPg. duMO, lier, conjecturably the right one.
like Ar. dabdaba (a pron. like E. u), tho Fortnightly Rev., N. S., XL. 461.
uoi.st
= It. duhio, dubbio), doubtful: see doubt^.] 1.
of a drum, of horses' feet, etc. The noun dub'^ Doubting; hesitating; wavering or fluctuating dubitative (du'bi-ta-tiv), a. [= F. dubitaHf
isratherduetodaftl, 4 (a), dress with an adz.] in opinion, but inclined to doubt. = Pr. dubitatiu Sp. Pg. It. dubitativo, < LL. =
To make a quick noise, as by hammering or At first he seemed to be very dubtout in entertaining
dubitativus, < L. dubitare, doubt: see dubitate.]
drumming. any discourse with us, and gave very Impertinent answers Tending to doubt ; doubting. [Rare.]
"llb2 (dub), n. [See rf«ft2, f.] A blow. to the questions that we demanded of him. They were engaged. She had been niMilcd at. all but
Vampier, Voyages, I. 12. eaten up, while he hung dubitaticf ; and lliough that was
As skilful coopers hmip their tubs
'With Lydian and with Phrygian rftiAs. Dubiout still whose word to take. the cause of his winuiug her, it olTeuded his niceuess.
S. Sutitr, Uudlbras, U. L 8fia Brmminy, Ring and Book, I. 121. O. Meredith, The Egoist, Ui.
— — —
a floor, and the village boys delighted to play marbles in Before I help you.
this convenient spot. Their cries of "rounses," "taw," Beau, and Fl., Scornful Lady, ii. 2.
*'dtibs," "back licks," and "vent" might often be heard 2. To nod or bob the head suddenly bow. ;
there before and after school hours.
The Century, XXXVI. 78. Because I cannot flatter, and look fair, . . .
terns of the subgenus Thalasseus, as Sterna Wig ducked to wig, each blockhead had a brother, and
{Thalasseus) cantiaca. Cones. there was a universal apotheosis of the mediocrity of our
set. Lowell, Among my Books, 1st ser., p. 338.
dncally (dti'kal-i), adv. After the manner of
a duke; with a duke or a ducal family: as, H. trans. 1. To dip or plunge in water and
dueally connected. immediately withdraw : as, to duck a witch or a
dncape (dii'kap), «. A heavy silk, especially scold.
So strait they were seizing him there
black or of plain color, usually corded. To duck him likewise.
ducat (duk'at), n. [Altered in spelling from Ducatoon struck by Antonio Priuli, Dojje of Venice, A. D. r6r8- 1623. Robin Hood and Little John (Child's Ballads, V. 220).
earlier duck'at, ducket, < ME. duket (= D. du- Britisii Museum. ( Size of ttie oriijinal.)
I say,duck her in the loch, and then we will see whether
kaat, G. dukat, Dan. Sw. dukat), < OF. and F.
ducat : see ducat."] .The English name of the she is witch or not. Scott, Abbot, ii.
ducat =
Pr. ducat =
Sp. Pg. ducado It. du- = dueatone, a silver coin (also called giustina) for- 2. To lower or bend down suddenly, as in dodg-
cato, < ML. dueatus, a ducat; so called, it is
merly current in the republic of Venice, and ing a. missile or an obstacle, or in saluting awk-
said, from the motto "Sit tibi, Christe, datus,
containing nearly 398 grains of fine silver, equal wardly: as, to duck the head.
quem tu regis, iste dueatus" (let this duchy to 0.965 of the United States silver dollar. ducfcl (duk), ». [< duek^, v.l A diving incli-
which thou rulest be dedicated to thee, O nation of the head.
Some gae her crowns, some ducadoons.
Christ), impressed on a coin struck by Roger Oighfs Lady (Child's Ballads), VIII. 290). As it is also their generall custome scarcely to salute
II. of Sicily as duke of Apulia < ML. dueatus, ;
The duckatoone, which containeth eii^ht livers, that is, any man, yet may they neither omitte crosse, nor carved
a duchy, < L. dux {due-), a leader, ML. duke see : six shillings. This piece hath in one side the effigies of statue, without a religious duck.
duke^. a doublet of dacat] 1.
Cf. dnehy, ult. the Duke of Venice and the Patriarch, . . . and in the Discov. of New World, p. 128.
A gold coin of varying form and value, formerly other, the figure of St. Justlna, a chast I'atavine [Paduan]
virgin. Coryat, Crudities, II. 68.
Here without duck or nod,
lie,
Other trippings to be trod
in use in several European countries. A ducat Of lighter toes. Milton, Comus, 1. 960.
was first issued io Apulia, alwut the middle of the twelfth duces, n. Plural of dvj:.
duces tecum (dii'sez te'kum). will [L., you duck^ (duk), n. [= Se. duik, duke, dook, < ME.
bring with you duces, 2d pers.
: sing. fut. ind. ducke, dukke, doke, dokke, douke, duke, < AS. diiee
of dueere, lead, bring (see duet) ; te, abl. of tu (found only in gen. ducan), a duck, lit. a ducker,
= E. thou; cum, with (appended to personal < *duean (pret. pi. *dueon, pp. *ddccn), duck,
pronouns).] In law, a writ commanding a per- dive : see duck^, v. Cf . ducker, 3 ; Dan. duk-and,
son to appear in court, and to bring with him dyk-and, a sea-duck (and, duck: see drake^);
specified documents or other things in his cus- Sw. dyk-fdgel, diver, plungeon (fdgcl ^1. fou-l). =
tody, which may be required as evidence. More So diier, dipper, dopper, etc., names applied to
fully called subpoena duces tecum. See subpoena. diving birds.] 1. A. lamellirostral natatorial
Ducnet, a. and n. An obsolete form of Dutch. bird of the family Anatidw and subfamily Ana-
duchess (duch'es), re. [Formerly also dutchess; tinee or FuliguUnce (which see). The technical dis-
Ducat of Ladislaus Postumus, Kinf of Hungary, A- D. 1453- 1457. tinction between any duck and other birds of the same fam-
British Museum. (Size of tile original.) < ME.duchesse, duches (also dukes, i. e., dukess),
ily, as geese and mergansers, is not clear but a duck may
< OF. duchesse, F.. duchesse Pr. duquessa = = usually be recognized by the broad and flat bill, short
;
you must consider that this word duckat doth not signifie
Sp. Pg. dueado —
It. dttcato, < ML. dueatus, = with black or red heads are placed in ifenera variously
named Fuliimla, Fulix, Aithitia, \proca, etc.; such are
any one certaine coyne but many severall liieces do con- a duchy, territory of a duke, L. dueatus, military
; the scaups and pochards, the canvashack, and others. The
cnrre to make one duckat. Coryat, Crudities, II, en. leadership, command, < dux (due-), a leader, buflleheads, goldeueyes, and whistlewings belong to a ge-
— —
; ;
duck. H^l/ctiap, 17»4. [New- Haniiishire, l". S.J Crow — sqmiudcr ; throw into confusion with with or
;
of.
No, dainty duckers,
duck, .''ee i'uiica.— Cuthbert duck, or St Cutb-
:
I'p with your three pil'd spirits, yotn- wrought valours.
bert's duck, the cummuu eider, Somotoria fnUliuiina, He(the unscientific etymrdogist] has now added to his Beau, and FL, Philaster, iv. 1.
— Daub-duck, the ruddy duck, Erimatura rubida. G. marvellous capacity for philological blundering the power
3. A bird that ducks or dives; specifically, the
Traiuhull. [Rangeley lakes, Maine, U.8.1— Deaf-duck. of wandering into the flelcl of comparative philology and
.Same as daui-duec. [Michi^n, U. S.] Buck on drake, — of there playing duckt and drakeg with the Aryan roots European dipper, Cinclus aquaticus. MacgilH-
a game In which one player places upon a large stone (the and their permutations. y.andQ.,7lh ser., III. 312. vraxf, [Local, British.]
drake) a small stone (the ditck), which the other players My fortune is nae Inheritance —
a' mine ain acquisition
duckery (diik'^r-i), «. ;
pi. duckeries (-iz). [<
try to knock off with their ducks and return to the pitch- — I can make duckg and drakeg qf It. So don't provoke ducU^ T -cry,'] A place for breeding ducks.
ing-Une without liaWng been touched. If the player me. U. Mackenzie, Man of the World, iv. 1.
whose duck is on the drake succeeds in touching one of the Every city and village has fish ponds and dtickeries.
other players while his duck is In his hand, the latter takes Tree-duck, (a) Any dnck of the genus Dendrocyrma ISouthom China.] i'. S. Cmu. Jtep., No. Iv. (1885), p. 583.
his place, and tlie game continues as before. — (which seeX (6) The wood-duck or summer duck, which
DuclalT An obsolete spelling of ducat.
breeds In trees, (c) The hooded merganser so called from : ducket^, «.
duck, a French variety of the domestic duck, the result
of crossing white and colored varieties. Dumpllng- — breeding in trees, R, Ridgway. (Indiana, Illinois, l^ S.] ducket-, «. A corruption of dowcotc^ variant of
duck. Same as dault^aek. [(Jeorgia, l'. S. Dunter — — Tufted duck, the ring-necked scaup, Aith;/ia coUarig dovtc'ifr.BrockcU.
or PuUguta rujUortjueg. A. IFi'fsim.— Velvet duck, the
j
duck. See dunter.— Dntkr and spotted duck, the duck-hawk (duk'h^k), n, 1. In England, the
harlequin duck. O. Bdwardt, 1747.— Dusky duck, .l"""
velvet or white-wingedacoter. Seenroter. Wheat-duck, —
the American widgeon. D.Crary. |iires.'on,l-. s.j Whls- — moor-buzzard or marsh-harrier, Circus ctrugi-
obteura, a large duck closely related to the uialluni. <if va-
ried dnrk coloration, with white under the wings and pur-
-
tle-dnck. See »rti»«f«rin</.— -Whistling duck or coot,
the American black scoter.— White-faced duck or teal,
nosus. —
2. In the United States, the great-foot-
l>li :>-cnlum, abundant along the eastern coast of
the blue-winged teaL See f«if. —White- winged surf-
ed hawk or peregrine falcon, FaJco peregrinuSf
ites, and highly esteemed for food. Avariety
t
duck, the velvet scoter. See «cor<T.— Wild duck, specifi- var. anatum : so called from its habitually prey-
T' iorida Is Anas obteura fulviffuia, — Bngl1«h
duck O.Trumbull. [Local, southern
iiiiillard.
cally, the mallard.— Winter duck, the lung. tailed duck. ing upon ducks, it is very closely related to and not
til
— Fall duck, the American redhead or pochard. School-
».[ T'.
(I'. S.l —
Wood duck. See urofKl duck. specifically distinct from the peregrine falcon of the old
crnft, Isxi; Tuinrr, 1830.— Fan-CreSted dUClC, the hood- dnck* (duk), [Prob. a familiar use of duck^,
«. world. It la a bird of great strength and spirit, a true
I Barto»,l799.— Fish- or llslllng-duck,a like dorr, c/iiVA-1 =zchurk'^, mouse, lamb, F.poide, falcon, little in-
'1 mergansers, from their food or haltits.— ferior to the ger-
v and other zoOlogit-al terms of endearment but ;
falcon in size,
Seojlocin'ii^-/owi.— Fool-duck, the ruddy
I'i
dii ^ I, ,firurarubida. O.TruinbuiL [Michigan, U. .S.J pf. Dan. dukke =
Sw. docka =
East Fries, dokke, and about as
—French duck, the mallard. JLoulsiaDa, U. S.]— Oer- dok =
O. docke, etc., a doll, puppet: see dock^. large as the lan-
manduck,tbegadwalL Alsocalled WeUharake. Oiraud, Cf. also doxy.] A
sweetheart; a darling: a ner or prairie-
\rA4. [.NewJersey, U.S.) Cbray duck, (a) Properly, the — word of endearment, fondness, or admiration.
falcon.
male, which
The fe-
grayoraadwall, .kmustrepenior ChauUlarmug ttreperut, is
(h) The female mallard, (e) The female pintalL [Local, It is sometimes also applied to things: as, a larger than the
r. S. -Harle duck, .^amu as Aarfi;. JUv. C. Sufainton,
I
duck of a bonnet. [Colloq.] male, ia 17 to 19
\-.<,. [iirkiiey isliii. Is.] -Harlequin duck. See Aarfa- inches long and
Will you buy any tape
7><i/i.— Heavy-tailed duck, the ruddy duck. Also about 45 In ex-
(h- lace for your cape.
cilled britUetaU, pinlaU, quOUaa, ttiektaO, tti/taa, tent of wings.
My dainty duck, my dear-aT In both sexes,
iii»e(aU, etc, in reference to the pecnllar tail-fealhei*. Shak., W. T., It. S (song).
sharpUn. 183a [Chesapeake Bay, U. & ] BcnUd dnck: — when adult, the
the herald, a merganser. [Shetland Mea.) — Isle* of Prithee goc In (my duck) lie bnt speak to 'em. ; upper parts are
Sboals dnd^ the American elder.— labrador duck, And return instantly. FUteher, Spanish (Torate, 11. 2. slaty-blue or
f' f^ymius labradoriuM, a species of sea-duck of the dark-bluish ash,
duck-* (duk), Ji. [< D. doek, linen cloth, a towel,
'
light canvas, =
MLG. dok OHG. tuoh, = MHG. head, the sides
(1
I
I'.
I'.'iicardg, 1747. — Little brown duck, the tuoch, G. tuch, cloth, =
Icel. duk-r, any cloth or of which have
I .il C<K«6y,173l.— IaOIlK-taileddUCk,//<ir'U<>
tj II!! . te.xture, a table-cloth, a towel, Sw. duk Dan. = = a characteristic
curved black
''tcialU iiv Ctanffula hyenuUis. See hareLl and Ilarelda.
Maiden duck, the shoveler. Bev. C. Siraiwon. [Wex-
dug, cloth.] 1. A
strong linen fabric simply stripe; the un-
woven without twill, lighter than canvas, and
Kandarin-dael^ a beantUul kind of
I
— der parts are
used for small sails, sails for pleasure-boats, and
I
Hire-, mow-, or mulr-duck, the mallard. the second grade, for strength and durability, blue-black; the cere and feet are yellow. The duck-hawk
' •»». (Loosl, Eng.l Moimtaln duck, the — after double-warp (which see, under warp). —
is widely but irregularly distributed throughout North
I r.f.Riekardmji. (Ilud.^m s l»ay.] Mussel- — Russia duck, a white linen canvas of fine quality. America; it nests indifferently on trees, cliffs, or the
ground, and usually lays 3 or 4 heavily colored e^rs.
duck, til A merican scaup. O. Trumbull. [Shinnecock
l.in. .\. w —
V .rk, U. S.) Noisy duck, the long-Uilcd duck. dnck-ant (duk'&nt), n. In Jamaica, a species ducking^ (duk'ing), «. [Verbal n. of duck\ v.]
» —Painted duck, (o) The Chinese man- of Tcrmci or white ant, whieh, according to P.
./ / I " '.'
1. The act of plunging or the being plimged
rieulata. (6) The harletiuin. |Hiid< H. Gosse, constructs its nest on the branches into water: as, to get a ducking.
iiln-dnck. a variety of the domestic or trunlcH of trees, where clusters of them may
attitude.- Fbeasant-dnck. u itserect At length, on the 18th of September, we crossed the line
\>\iiViil, Oafilaaeuta, Also called sea-vA«a«a7U and
be seen forming large, black, round masses, in the longitude of 8° west; after which the ceremony of
IfAuant. A related nedea is technically known often as liii; as a lingshead. duekirur, Ac., generally practised on this occasion, was not
'nurophagiana. [Local, U.S.] (b) The hooded mer-
'
duckatt, dnckatoont. Obsolete forms of ducat, omitted. CooAr, Voyages, III. iL 1.
Jaiiier. Also called ?flfl(rr-pA*a«iiil. Lawmm.VIQO. [New iluraionn. 2. The act of bowing stiffly or awkwardly.
ersey, (J. S.j Pled dudC, the Labrador duck. Camp- — duckbill (duk'bil), B. 1. The duck-billed pla-
tni^Kmug labrn^l''r:n^. — Pled gray duck, tlie male pintAil. For my kneeling down at my entrance, to begin with
O.Trumbull. New Y.irk. r.S.) — Puddle-
1,
tyjius, Ornithnrhifnchus paradoxus, a monotre- prayer, and after to proceed with reverence, I did bnt my
dttCk, the co^ duck, of no slHN-inl l.reed. —
I.- matous oviparous mammal of Australia, hav- duty in that let hint scolfingly call it cringing or duck- ;
ing, he (the Chesapeake Bay dog] is the dog par excel- conduct, draw, bring forward, etc. (in a great itscourse tlirough the cavity of the thorax. In man this
ienee. Sportsinnn's Gazetteer, p. 424.
variety of uses), =
Goth, tiuhan OHG. ziohan, = duct is from 15 to 18 inches long it begins opposite the
;
ducts began
little
•
^li'Se Tdtfk'tilbl),
"If- ^abim, W*«U- °'
'Ti'
see rf«c«.] Capable of bemg
[Rare.]
drawn out; ductile.
<
a. [< L. as if ^ductibilis
^
To feed thy bones with lime, and ran The purest gold is most ductible.
Their course, thou wert also man.
till Feltham, Resolves, ii. 2. .
Eartitions. Tiie walls are variously marked by pits and led, extended, or hammered out thin, < ductus,
y spiral, annular, or reticulated thickenings, and the pp. of dwcere, lead : see duct.'] 1. Susceptible
cavity may be filled with air or water, or they may be of being led or drawn ; tractable; complying;
Duclcing-stool. lactiferous. (2) In bryology, the narrow continuous cells
whicli surround tlie utricle's in tlie leaves of Spltagnum.— yielding to persuasion or instruction: as, the
the seat was fitted or from which it was suspended liy a Aberrant duct of the testis. See aterrane.- Acous- ductile mind of youth ; a ductile people.
chain. The ducking-stool is mentioned in the Doomsday tic duct. See acoustic and a udifori/.— Annular duct. The sinful wretch has by her arts defiled
survey ; it was extensively in use throughout Great Brit- See awmiiar.- Archinephrlc duct, the duct of the ar- The ductile spirit of iny darling child.
ain from tlie fifteenth till tlie beginning of tlie eigliteenth chinephron, or primitive kidney.— Arterial duct, audi- Crabbe, Works, IV. 139.
century, and in one rare case at least— at Leominster
— tory duct, branchial duct. See tlie adjectives.— Bili-
ary duct, one of the raniilied systems of ducts which col- Says he, " while his mind's ductile and plastic,
was used as recently as 1809. See cucking-stool. Also
lect tlie bile from tlie liver and by their union form the I'll place him at Dotheboys Hall,
called castigatory-
hepatic duct.— Cystic duct, the duct of the gall-bladder Where he'll learn all that's new and gj-mnastic."
If he be not fain before he dies to eat acorns, let me directly as m Bartiam, Ingoldsby Legends, II. 166.
mouth be made a
my conveying bile into the intestine, cither or,
live with nothing but pollerd, and "
man, by uniting with the hepatic duct in a ductus com- The overwhelming popularity of " Guzman de Alfarache
ducking-atool for every scold. one
Miseries of Inforst Marriage, ui.
.
munis choledochus.— Duct or canal of Bartholin, rendered this form of fiction sp generally welcome in
.
G- Wilkins, . .
of the ducts of the sublingual gland, running alongside of Spain that it made its way into the ductile drama.
dnckins (duk'inz), [Origin obscure.]
n. A Wharton's duct, and opening into it or close to its orifice
Gaertnman
Ticknor, Span. Lit., III. 106.
mouth.— Duct of Gartner. Same as
name in Berwick, England, of the sea-stickle- into the 2. Flexible; pliable.
canaHwhichsee,undercr(/(ail).— Duct or canal of Muller
hack, Si)inachia vulgaris. (ductus Muclleri), tlie iiriiiiitive oviduct, or passage in the The and leaves of radiant gold.
ductile rind
[A dial, transposition of Dryden, ^neid.
duckish (duk'ish), n. female from the ovary to the exterior, which sulisequently
ditsk.'] Dusk. Ualliwell. [Prov. Eng.] becomes converted, as in mammals, into the Fallopian The toughest and most knotty parts of language became
Having short tube, uterus, etc. One Miillerian duct may be obliterated, ductile at his touch. Macaulay, Dryden,
duck-legged (duk'leg"ed), a.
or botli may persist, in different animals or the two may
;
legs, like a duck. be united in one in most of their extent, giving rise to 3. Capable of being dra-wn out into -wire or
Dmh-h'rig'd, short-waisted, such a dwarf she is, a single uterus and vagina with a pair of Fallopian tubes. threads : as, gold is the most ductile of the
That slie must rise on tiptoes for a kiss. —Duct or canal of Wharton. See Wharton's duct, be-
metals.
Dryden, tr. of Juvenal's Satires, vi. low.— Duct or canal of Wirsung. See pancreatic duet. tensile, as metals, that will be
— Ducts or canals of Rivinus (ductus Riviniam), those All bodies, ductile and
duckling (duk'ling), 11. [< ME. dokelyng, dooke- ducts of the sulilingual gland which open apart from one drawn into wires. Bacon.
lyiige; <duck^ + dim. -ling'':] A young duck. another and from Wharton's duct.— Ducts or canals Of J„p*npl v fduk'til-li).
tAu^^^^^j \ '? adv. In a
ductile manner.
Stenaon, the communication of Jacobson's bson's organ witli the
I must have my capons Imp. Diet.
And turkeys brought me with my green geese buccal cavity.— Efferent duct. Same as deferent canal
n. The quality of be-
in,
And ducklings th' season. (which see, under ((cA'/rnO—EJaculatory duct orcanal. ductileness (duk'til-nes),
i'
, „ .. .
See ductus ejaculalorius, under ductus.- Galactopho- capability of recei-ving extension
Fletcher, Beggars Bush, i. 1. ing ductile ;
rouB duct, one of the lactiferous ducts of the mamillary by drawing; ductility. [Rare.]
So have
Young
I seen, within a pen,
ducklings foster'd by a hen.
—
gland which terminate in the nipple. Genito-urinary
I, when I value gold, may think upon
Swift, Progress of Marriage. duct. See the extract.
The ductileness, the application.
In the Urodela, the vasa eflerentia of each testis enter the Donne, Elegies, xviii.
duck-meat, duck's-meat (duk'-, duks'met), n. inner side of the corresponding kidney, and traverae it, ,. , ,. ^ r -ci j
The popular name of several species of Lemna leavingitsouterside to enter a f7e«ito-«rtjia)-!/di«;(, which ductilimcter (duk-ti-lim'e-ter), n. [= t . auc-
and Wolffia, natural order Lemnacece, plants lies on the outer side of the kidney, ends blindly in front, fin,^^ffg < L. ductilis, ductile, metrum, mea- -I-
and opens behind into the cloaciL^^_^^ j^^ instrument for showing with preci-
growing in ditches and shallow water, floating ^_^^^ ^^^^^ ^ ^^^ ^^^^-^
on the surface, and eaten by ducks and geese. conveying bile to the /'°i?. |.^.l'^^'=l!^i^L°!:?'f -
See Lemna. Also called duckweed.
Hepatlc duct, the duct of the liver,
"tfsthie, either directly or, as in man, by uniting with^the ductlllty
^^t-- * • duCtlUte-ii^.
(duk-tiU.-tl),_m.^^[= duetilite Sd F
duck-mole (duk'mol), n. Same as duckbill, 1. cystic duct to form the ductus communis choledochus. ductilidad Pg. ductilidade =
It. duttilita, < =
ITie dui-k-mole, on the other hand, lays two eggs at a It is formed in man of two main branches which issue as if *dtictilita(t-)s, < diictilis, ductile: see duc-
time, and does not carry them about, but deposits them
from the liver at the transverse fissure, one from the tile.} 1. That property of solid bodies, particu-
mole. right, the other from the left lobe, and unite in one trunk
in her nest, an underground burrow like that of the larly metals, which renders them capable of
Pop. Sci. Ho., XXVII. 666. before joining the cystic duct.
All the ducts from the liver being extended by drawing, with correlative
duckoyt, n. [See decoy, as decoy.
v."] Same and gall-bladder are sometimes diminution of their thickness or diameter, -with-
duck's-bill (duks'bil), n. In printing, a pro- known as biliarjj ducts, collec-
out any actual fracture or separation of parts.
tively.— Lactiferous duct.
jecting lip (0) of stiff paper or cardboard On this property the wire-drawing of metals depends. It
Same as galactophorous duct. Dr. 'Wollaston suc-
pasted on the tympan of a hand-press to sus- —Lymphatic duct. See is greatest in gold and least in lead.
shooting wild ducks. In both sexes the products ductiont (duk'shon), n. [< L. ductio{n-), < duc-
duck's-meat, n. See duck-meat. escape by an app.ar,atus which ttis, pp. of dueere, lead: see duct.'] Leading;
duck-snipe (duk'snip), n. The semipalmated is homologous with the Miil- guidance.
tattler or willet, Symphemia semipalmata. Dr. lerian duct, consisting of a Human Thoracic Duct and
canal of varying length, and Azygous Veins. The but meanly wise and common ductions of bemisted
Ilenni lirmnt, 1859. [Bahamas.] nature. Feltham, Resolves, ii. 66.
provided with an infundibular a, receptacle of the chyle
duckweed (duk' wed), «. Same as duck-meat. orifice, which is attached to the *, trunk of the thoracic duct,
;
mina, as "30 manahs. Palace of Irba Merodach, King of glands; A.A.a shortportionof HuCtOT (duk tOr), «. [< L. dUCtOr, & ieauer, <>
See ductus
Babylon." Steno's duct.
under ductus. — Vein's nrn''?I?aiJ;uh''aXfo"^ duccrc, pp. ductus, lead : see duct.:] It. leader. A
Duclair duck. See duck^.
L., ductus; = OF.
Stcnonis,
Thoracic duct, the ductus each side of the duct, until 7'
jjrowne
(j,-_ —
2 An iiiking-roUer on a print-
duct (dukt), n. [Also, as thoracicns, the common trunk ;5'j!,1nr/%S'"The'lt';u?: ing-press which takes printing-ink from the
duit, doit, doet = Pg. ducto = It. dutto, < L. duc- of all the lymphatics, except- tures represented rest nearly
juk-fountain and oonducts it (whcncc the name)
tus, a leading, a conduifc-pipe (of. aqueduct, ing those which form the right upon tnc D&Cic*DOiic*
;
dnctor due
to the distributing-table and -rollers. Improp- TU woimdy
cold, sore. I dodder and shake like an The Archbishop of Canterbury, writing a Letter to
aspen leaf, every joint of me. him [Wolsey], subscribed Your Brother William of Can-
erlv called doctor bv many pressmen. Ford and Dekker. Witch of Edmonton, ii. 1. terbury he took it in great Dudgeon to be termed his
;
In anat., any duct, tube, pipe, canal, or other -1^1.]' Ragged; tattered; having a disreputable I would not be an ass. Beau, and Ft., Captain, ii. 1.
conduit. (In technical use the Latin form is com-
appearance. dudgeon-daggert (duj'on-dag"fer), n. A dagger
monly pre8erve<l.]— Ductus ad nasum (duct to the Nae tawted tyke, though e'er sae duddxe, having an ornamental hilt of wood ; hence, a
nose), the nasal or lacrvmal duct, cinveyini; tears from But he wad stan't, as glad to see him.
one carried
till- ive ta the nrse. Ductus arteriosus. Same as — Bums, The Twa Dogs. dagger of any sort, but especially
r !/ duct (whiih see, under arterioQ.— DnctUB Bel- by a civilian, and not a weapon of war.
Their goods were contained in certain duddy pokes.
'I "
llnlani (duct ut Bellini), the excretory tubes of the kid- Carlyle, in Froude, I. 271. An his justice be as short as his memory,
! 1 . -Ductus BotalU (duct of Botalli), a ductus arteri- A dudgeon dagger will serve him to mow down sin withall.
;. trttwecii the fourth aortic arch and the nfth; in mam-
duddy (dud'i), «. ; pi. duddies (-iz) [Dim. of Beau, and Fl., Coxcomb, v. 1.
li-. the couiniiinicatiou which persists during fetal life j„w A little rnir
1 Mnrknu
ui.nthearchof theaortaand thepulmonar>arten\ J jJ,.A! ^ [A slang
(dud), n. r^',
, *•
term -a t have on- dudgeon-haftf (duj'on-haft), «. [Early mod.
to \.
passage, after birth, the duct whLh dudo said
ginated in London, hngland. It trst became E. also diidgiii hafte;< dudgeon^ + haft] The
on the ciosur^ of
ijcconies a tli)rou8 cord, the ligamentum Botalli. Tl)e
term is sometimes extended to the corresponding ductus known in general colloquial and newspaper use haft or liilt of a dagger ornamented with graven
arteri.«i of uthj^r primitive aortic arches. So uMied from ^ ^j^ ^j^ ^f ^y^g so-called " esthetic '^move- lines.
Lojuardo BoUlli. of I*iedraont, bom at- Asti about 1530, „„
and „„
dress „„j
m in laao
;„ a
.
„..„
who descrilwd it in IS&i. Ductus choledochus, -
a bile- — -
ment manners, loo^-S. The A dudgeon haft of a dagger, [F.] dague a roeUes.
term has no antecedent record, and is prob. Shxricood,
duct the common bile-duct. Also called iluHut eomiiiu-
nin choUdoehu$.
;
See choledoch. DuCtUB COChlearis, — merely one of the spontaneous products of pop- dudgeon-tree, «. [Sc. dugeon-tree ; < dudgeon^
til i,i..,ir (which see, under conai').— Ductus
i-anal
Cuvler),s short traasvetse venous trunk,
ular slang. There is no known way, even in + trcf.} Wood for staves. Jamieson. [Scotch.]
C .)f
A
'
I cava superior persists.— Ductus parently natural, is highly improbable.] fop I suppose it to be the efflorescence of that pseudo-res-
( ilat-jry duct), in both V'trteAroto and or exquisite, characterized by affected refine- theticism which has had other outcome in sun-flowers, and
1 , ...the duct conveying semen from the
. , . ..
ments of dress, speech, manners, and gait, and Dnde-igm, and crazy quilts, and crushed strawberry tints.
tt^sticies or auociate structures to the canal of the intro- D. (J. Mitchell, Bound Together.
niittent oncan. especially from the seminal vesicles to the a serious mien ; nence, by an easy extension,
,,r. ,i,r.. _
Dnctns endolymptiatlcns, a tubular process and with less of contempt, a man given to ex- Dudley limestone, trilobite. See limestone,
• ::inous labyrinth of the ear which passes cessive refinement of fashion in dress. trilohitc.
into the cranial cavity,
iu»ductus vestitiiili
There was one young man from the West, who would dudman (dud'man), n. ; pi. dudmen (-men). [<
t :
-, lu- ..1 ...-..,, .,.1 i...-^.._- n .,i tKxly, be demancwd as a debt: as, the interest falls
It is not the descendant* of the " Mayflower," in short,
.4
Ductus Rlvinl or KlTlnlanl. the who are the representative Americans of the present day due next month.
hiih see, under (/i>W).— Ductus Bte- The penalty,
it is the Micks and the Fats, the Hanses and the Wilhelms,
'
df>ga =
It. doga, dial, rfotvi (ML. doga), a stave 2. Owing by right of circumstances or condi-
the (-unitnuni<-ati-ii) between the primitive intestine and
the eavjty o( tlie yolk sac or nmbilieal vesicle. Duc- — (of a hogshead or other cask), < MD. dut/ghe, tion ; that ought to be given or rendered ; prop-
tus Wirsun^lanus, the duct of Wirsung. the principal D. duig =
MHO. duge, G. dauoe, a stave fur- ;
er to be conferred or devoted : as, to receive
pan-r-iiti. .iii.t, -Ductus Wolffll (Wolfflan duct), tlic one with due honor or courtesy.
t of tlie Wolffian bo«ly or primitive kidney,
'
ther origin unknown.] I. n. If. stave of a A
soon disappearing for the most part, In tlie barrel or cask. [Recorded only in the com- Do thou to euery man that is due,
As thou woldist he dide to thee.
j^ the pennanent va* deferens, or excretory pound dudgeon-tree: see def. 2 and dudgeon-
<i >>i 111- testicla.
<
-
(See also eano/l.)
MK tree.^ —
2. Wood for staves: same as dudgeon- We receive
Ilyinne to Virgin, etc. (E. E. T. 8.), p. 63.
And on thy blade and dudoeon gout* of blood. he arrived in d^ie time or course.
dudes, as in Barman's "Caveat" (1567), where Shak., Macbeth, IL 1. Mony dayes he endurit, all in due pes.
theword erroneously set down as "pedlar's
is And had rest in his rewme right to his dethe.
French" —
that is, tlueves' cant.] Clothes;
6t. A See dudgeon-dagger.
dagger. Destruction of Troy (E. E. T. S.), L 13386.
especially, poor or ragged clothing; tatters:
n.t a. Ornamented with graven lines full ;
They cannot nor are not able to make any due proofe
of wavy lines ; curiously veined or mottled. of our letters of coquet. Haktuyte Voyaget, I. 211.
used in contempt. [Cofloq. or humorous.]
Now for the l)OX.tree seldome hath it any graine
: . . .
Last of all he was seen of me also, as of one born out of
I se warrant it was the tae half of her fee and bountith, damaake wise, and never but about the root, the
crisped dt«i time. 1 Cor. xv. 8.
for she wared (spent) the ither half on pinners and pearl- which is dud^n and full of wnrke.
lugs; . . , shell ware 't a' on du/i« and nonsense. To ask your patience.
UoUand, it. of Pliny, xvi. 16.
If too much zeal hath carried him aside
Scott, Old Mortality, xiv.
dudgeon^ (duj'on), n. [By apheresis from the From the dite path. B. Jongon, Alchemist, iii. 2.
Away I went to sea, with my duds tied in a han'kercher.
JTrs. Stoux, Oldtown, p. 84. form endugine, appar. < W. "endygen, < en-,
orig. 4. That is to be expected or looked for un- ;
At some windows hnng lace curtains, flannel duds at an enhancing prefljt, + dygen, malice, resent- der engagement as to time; promised as, the :
Home. a. W. Cable, Old Creole Days, p. 181. ment. Cf. dychan, a jeer, dygas, hatred, Com. train is due at noon he is due in New York to-
;
dudder^ (dud't-r), v. [Var. of dodder'^ and did- dur.han, duwhan, grief, sorrow.] A feeling of —
morrow. 6. Owing attributable, as to a cause
;
il'T, q. v.] I. intrans. To didder or dodder; offense; resentment; sullen anger; ill will; dis- or origin ; assignable followed by : to : as, the
shiver or tremble. cord. delay was due to an accident.
— ;;;
Men
that cleave the soil, clliren = Dan.
duellere = Sw. duellera ; from The crew . .are allowed [on Sunday] a pudding, or,
.
Sow the seed, and reap the harvest with enduring toil. the noun.] I. intrans. To engage in single as it is called, a duff. This is nothins; more than flour
Storing yearly little dues of wheat and wine and oil. boiled with water, and eaten with molasses.
Tennyson, The Lotos-Eaters (Choric Song).
combat ; fight a duel.
R. H. Dana, Jr., Before the Mast, p. 19.
With the king of France duelled he.
3. Right ; just title. Metrical Romances, ill. 297.
3. Vegetable growth covering forest-ground.
The key of this infernal pit by due [Local. U. S.]
I keep.
.
Milton, P. L.,
. .
long before that time, have been duell'd or flux'd into an- [p. 102.
on merchant vessels passing through the Sound between
Denmark and Sweden. These dues were an important other world. South, Works, II. vi. 4. Fine coal.
source of revenue for Denmark they were sometimes par-
; The stage on which St. George duelled and killed the duff2 (duf), V. i. [Scotch.] In golf, to hit the
tially suspended, were regulated by various treaties, and dragon. Maundrelt. ground behind the ball.
continued until abolished for a compensation fixed by
treaties with the maritime nations. —
TO give the devU duelert, duellert (dii'el-6r), n. combatant Ouffar, n. Same Aas duffer^, duffart.
his due. See devil. in single fight ; a duelist. duffart (duf'art), «. and a. [Sc, also dowfart,
duel (dii), a«f». \(,due,a.'\ Directly; exactly: You may also see the hope and support of many a flour- doofart, < dowf, q. v., -art, -ard.] I. «. + A
only with reference to the points of the com- ishing family untimely cut off by a sword of a drunken dull, stupid fellow.
pass : as, a due east course. dueller, in vindication of something that he miscalls his II. a. Stupid ; dull ; spiritless.
honour. South, Works, VI. iii.
Due west it rises from this shrubby point. duff-day (duf 'da), n. The day on which duff is
Milton, Comus, 1. 306. dueling, duelling (du'el-ing), n. [Verbal n. of served on board ship; Sunday.
The Danube descends upon the Euxine in a long line duel, U.J The fighting of a duel ; the practice duffel, n. and a. See duffle.
running diie south. De Quincey, Herodotus. of fighting duels. duffer 1 (duf'^r), H. [Origin obscure.] 1. A
due^t, V. t. [Early mod. E. also dewe; < ME. duelist, duellist (du'el-ist), n. [= D. duellist, < peddler; specifically, one who sells women's
dtwn, by apheresis from enduen, endewen, en- F. duclliste Sp. duelista Pg. It. =
duellista ; as clothes. =
dowen: see endue'^, endow.'] To endue; endow. duel -ist.'] One who fights + single combat m
A cl.ass of persons termed '^duffers," "packmen," or
For Fraunces founded hem [religious orders] nougt to one who practises or promotes the practice of "Scotchmen," and sometimes " tallymen," traders who go
dueling. rounds with samples of goods, and take orders for goods
faren on that wise,
afterwards to be delivered, but who, carrying no goods for
Ne Domynik dued hem neuer swiche drynkers to worthe You imagine, perhaps, that a contempt fop your own life immediate sale, were not within the scope of the existing
[become], fiers Plowman's Credo (E. E. T. S.), 1. 776. gives you a right to take that of another ; but where, sir, charge, were in 1861 brought within the charge by special
This is the latest glory of thy praise, is the difference between a duellist who hazards a life of
enactment and rendered liabla. to duty. These duffers
That I, thy enemy, d!t« thee withal. no value, and the murderer who acts with greater security ? were numerous in Cornwall.
Shak., 1 Hen. VI., iv. 2. Goldsmith, Vicar. S. Dmeell, Hist. Taxation, HI. 38
due-bill (dti'bil), n. A
brief written acknow- duello (du-el'o), ». [< It. duello : see duel.'] 1. 2. hawker of cheap, flashy, and professedly A
ledgment of indebtedness, differing from a duel ; a single combat. A smuggled articles ; a hawker of sham jewelry.
promissory note in not being payable to or- This being well forc'd, and xn-g'd, may have the power [Eng. in both uses.]
der or transferable by mere indorsement. To move most gallants to take kicks in time.
And spurn out the duelloes out o' th' kingdom. duffer^ (duffer), «. [Appar. a var. of duffart,
due corde (do'e kor'de). [It. : due, fern, of duo, Fletcher (and another 1), Nice Valour, iii. 1. q. v.] stupid, dull, plodding person ; a fogy; A
< L. duo =
E. two; corde, pi. of corda, < L. a person who only seemingly discharges the
chorda, cord, chord: see chord.'i Two strings: 2. The art or practice of dueling, or the code functions of his position ; a dawdling, useless
in music, a direction to play the same note si- of laws which regulate it. character: as, the board consists entirely of
multaneously on two strings of any instrument The gentleman will, for his honour's sake, have one old
duffers.
of the violin class. bout with you he cannot by the duello avoid it.:
Shak., T. N., iii. 4. Duffers (if I may use a slang term which has now be-
due-distant (du'dis'tant), a. Situated at a come classical, and which has no exact equivalent in Eng-
suitable distance. [A nonce-word.] +
duelsome (du'el-sum), a. [< duel -some.'] In- lish proper) are generally methodical and old. Fosset cer-
clined or given to dueling ; eager or ready to tainly was a duffer. Hood.
A seat, soft spread with furry spoils, prepare ;
Due-distant, for us both to speak and hear. fight duels. [Rare.] "And do you get £800 for a small picture?" Mackenzie
Poj^e, Odyssey, xix. Incorrigibly ditelsome on his own account, he is for oth- asked severely. " Well, no," Johnny said, with a laugh,
" but then I am a duffer."
duefult (du'ful), a. [Formerly also dewful; < ers the most acute and peaceable counsellor in the world. W. Black, Princess of Thule, xxv.
Thackeray, Paris Sketch-Book,
duc^ + -ful.'i Pit ; becoming.
ii.
—
The snob, the cad, the prig, the duffer >lu Maurier has
But thee, Jove ! no equall Judge I deeme. due&a (do-a'nya), n. [Sp.] See duenna.
given us a thousand times the portrait of such specialties.
Of my desert, or of my dewfull Eight. dueness (du'nes), n. [< (fuel + -ness.] Fit- No one has done the duffer so well.
Spenser, F. Q., VII. vl. 35. ness; propriety; due quality. [Rare.] if. James, Jr., The Century, XXVI. 55.
;
:
gear, calico, duJU, and gewgaws. constructed for the passage of vehicles on the dukely (duk'li), a. [< duke^ + -ly^.l Becom-
W. Barrom, Oregon, p. 09. side of a very steep hill, along a bold river-
ing a duke. Southey.
2. Baggage; supplies; specifically, a sports- front, etc. [Western U. S.] dukery (du'kfer-i), n.; pi. dukeries (-iz). [<
man's or camper's outfit. dul-. [Accom. form of Skt. dvi (= E. tvi-), < dta duke^ + -ery.'\ ducal territory, or a duke's A
Erery one has gone to his chosen ground with too much L. duo = =
E. tmo : noting a supposed second seat as, the bakeries (a group of ducal seats in:
with reference to Boekling. It is now applied Jhite of this dymme place, a-non vndo the jates." dained clergy, and do not acknowledge the divinity of
Christ or the authority of the .Scriptures, to which they
to that of a haman female only in contempt. PUr$ />(owman(C), xxi. 3ti. give, in so far as they accept thcni, a mystical interpreta-
It was a laitbleas squire that was the sooroe Wlth-ynne the Cite were iij'" men defsosable, that of tlon. Owing to their murders ami cruelties, they were re-
(>f all my sorrow and ot these sad tears moved to the Caucasus In 1841 ami subseijucnt years; they
'
the i>idfcs made arete ioye when thei hym sangh.
;
With whom, from tender dug ot common noorae. Jffrlin (K. E. T. 8.X U. 188. now form a community there of seven villages.
At once I was up brought. Spetutr, r. Q. dulcamara (dul-ka-ma'rft), n. [= F. douce-
Hannibal, dute of Carthage. Sir T. Klyot.
She wildly breaketb from their strict enibraoe, aniire = Sp. dulcamara,
like a mllcb doe, wboae sweUlng dugt do aebe,
Uastlac to feed bar fawn hid in aome brake.
S. In Great Britain, France, Italy, Spain, and duhamara = Pg. It.
SMk., Venus and Adooia, L 878. Portugal,
a hereditary title of nobility, ranking duccamara, < NL. dul-
next below that of prince, but in some' instances camara, lit. bitter-
dug- <'<lug). Preterit and past participle of dig. a sovereign title, as in those of the dukes of < L. dulcis, sweet,
dugong (du'gong), ». [Also duyong; < Malay Burgtmdy, Normandy, Lorraine, etc. (see 3, be- sweet, amarus, bitter.] A
'
Javanese duyunn.'] A large aquatic low), or borne as bis distinguishing title by a +
pharmaceutical name
•roos mammal of the order •Virmta, Hali-
"•. of the Indian seas, in general con- prince of the blood royal. I'he first English duke for the bittersweet,
was Edward the Black Prince, created Solanum Dulcamara, a
"lables a cetacean, baring a tapering llsh- linke of OomwaU bi ISST. Inke^
in flukes like a whale's, with two tore
.'
whMi Brltiah peer% alt In the Boose common hedge-plant
o( Lords by right o( Urth Scotch ; through Europe and the
and Irish dukes hsve a right of elec- Mediti'rranean region,
tioo to it, in common with other and naturalized in the
pean ot tliose coonlries, in certain
praportloaa; la other countries, ex- United States. The root
cept Oermaay (see belowX the title Cofoaet of an Englisli and twigs have a peculiar
conveys no prescriptive political Duke. bitter-sweet taste, and have
power. In Oreat Britain a duke's been used in decoction for Bittersweet ISctamum Dultm-
coronet consists of a richly chased gold circle, having on the cure of diseases of the inara).
Itsupper edge ei^t strawberry -leaves, with or without a skin.
cap of crimson velvet, closed st the top with a gold tassel, dulcamarin (dul-ka-ma'rin), n. [= V.duU
lined with sarcenet, snd turned np wfth emiine. camarine; as dulcamara + -in^.] A glucoside
His grandfather was Lionel duk* of Clarence, obtained from the Solanum Dulcamara or bit-
Third son to the third Edward king of England. tersweet, forming a yellow, transparent, resin-
Skak., 1 Hen. VI., U. 4.
ous mass, readily soluble in alcohol, sparingly
Next In rank (to the sovereign] among the lords tem- so in ether, and very slightly soluble in water.
SttiUt, Const. Uist, I 42H.
duJc&niOIlt, 1. A word occurring in the phrase
poral were the duiru.
of tha daym tn leather, twiry, and ofl. Ikadagaacaod status, snd of these there sre but five, those of Anhalt, At duteamon, right at my wfttes ende.'
tiie naaalM.at the old and new world iMpaetl r aly, are Bmnswtck, 8axe- Altenburg. .Saxe-Coburg-Ootha, and Saze- Quod Pandarus, " Ve, nece, will yc here?
the best-known sbenlana, and leadins IMag icpnscnla- Melningen. Uodena and Parma, in Italy, were ruled by Dulcamon oUled is flemyng of wreches
*
'
HTca of the order Simia (which isei They may hare sovereign dnkes nntfl their Incorporation with the king- Itsemeth hard, for wreches wol nought lere,
eontriboted to the myth o( the '--"~" flee Halieor*. dom of Italy In isaa For veray slouthe, or other wilful teches."
TroUue, 9S1.
dugout (dug'out), A boat consisting of
n. 1. 4t. A name of the great eagle-owl of Europe,
ill.
a Totrwith the interior dug out or hollowed. It Bubo niaximiw, called otoimWhc by the French. Duteamon represents the Arabic dhil 'I kamein, 'lord of
is a common form of the primitive canoe. 6. pi. The fists.— [Slang.] -Duke of Exeter's the two horns,' a name applied to Alexander, either be-
cause he boasted himself the son of Jupiter Anmion, and
Onr boat was a rery aosafe dmf-out with no oat-i1(geis, daughtert. .See frroln-^ 12. -Duke palatine. fieejMfa- therefore had his coins stamped with horned images, or,
tiiie. —To dine with Duke Humphrey. <«« dine.
in which we eonld not dare to bafaUe a part of the way as some say, because he had In his power the eastern and
la sleep, (or fear of r a pahl ag It
ment
^
an nnmardcd Bore- duke^ (duk), V. i. pret. auil pp. duked, ppr. duk-
U. O. nirikeTtnitai ii Arcfatpclago, p. m. ing. [< duke^, n.] To play the duke. [Kare.]
; western world, si«ntfled in the two horns. (.Selden's
Preface to Drayton's Polyolblon.) But the epithet was
The sun was lost riafaic, as a nan stepped (torn his also applied to the 47th iin>position of Euclid, in which
Lord Angelo dukee it well in his absence.
slender du>/-<mt and drew half Its length out npon the Sltai.,U.tarii.,ULi. . the squares of the two sides of the right-angled triangle
oosy bank of a pretty bayon. stand out something like two horns. Tlits j>n)po8ition
O. W. CaU4, The Century, XXXV. at. dnke^, H. A
dialectal (Scoteh) form of duok^. was confounded by Chaucer with the &th proposition, the
113
; ;;
Il.t n. The sweetbread. good-sailing ship h.as been exactly followed in a new one,
Thee stagg upbreaking they slitto the dulcet or inche- anhydrid of duleitol (CeHi205), an alcohol pre- which has been proved, on the contrary, remarkably dtdl.
pyn. Stanikurst, jEneid, i. 218. pared by heating duleitol. Franklin, Autobiog., p. 262.
dulcetness (dul'set-nes), n. Sweetness. oulcite (dul'sit), n. [< L. duleis, sweet, + -ite"^.] 3. Wanting sensibility or keenness; not quick
Same as duleitol. in perception : as, dull of hearing ; dull of seeing.
Be so that there were no discommodities mingled
duleitol (dul'si-tol), n. [< duleite + -ol.] A
it
with the commodities yet as 1 before have said, the ; And yet, tho' its voice be so clear and full,
saccharine substance (CgHiiOg), similar to and
brevity and short time that we have to use them should You never would hear it your eai-s are so duU.
;
assuage their dulcetness. isomeric with mannite, which occurs in various Tennyson, The Poet's ilind.
J. Bradford, Writings (Parker Soc), I. 338.
plants, and is commercially obtained from an
4. Sad; melancholy; depressed; dismal.
dulciant, n. [= Dan. Sw. duleian =
OF. doul- unknown plant in Madagascar, and in the crude
If thi herte be dulle and myrke and felis nother witt ne
foine, doufainne, douceine, also doulcine, dou- state is called Madagascar manna. Also called
sauour ne deuocyone for to thynke.
cine, a flute, Sp. dulzaina = =
Pg. dulqairm, do- duleite, dulcin, dulcose. Hamjiole, Prose Treatises (E. E. T. S.),p. 40.
gaina, dogainha, < ML. dulciana, a kind of bas- dulcitudet (dul'si-tM), n. [< L. dulcitudo,
soon, < L. duleis, sweet: see dulce.] A
small sweetness, < duleis, sweet: see dulee, douce.] 5. Not pleasing or enlivening; not exhilarat-
bassoon. Sweetness. E. Phillips, 1706. ing; causing dullness or ennui; depressing;
cheerless: as, duM weather; a (i«H prospect.
dulciana (dul-si-an'ft), «. [ML., a kind of bas- dulcoratet (dul'ko-rat), V. t. [< LL. didcoraius,
soon: see duleian.] In organ-building, a stop pp. of dulcorare, sweeten, < dulcor, sweetness, He from the Rain-bow, as he came that way,
having metal pipes of small scale, and giv- < L. duleis, sweet: see dulce.] To sweeten; Borrow'd a Lace of those fair woven beams
Which clear Heavens blubber'd face, and gild dtdl day.
ing thin, incisive, somewhat string-like tones. make less acrimonious. J. Beaumont, Psyche, i. 59.
The word was formerly applied to a reed stop The ancients, for the duleorating of fruit, do commend profane fogs, far hence fly away
Fly, fly,
of delicate tone. See duleian. Also called swines-dung above all other dung. Taint not the pure streams of the springing day
Bacon, Nat. Hist., § 465.
dolcan. With your dull influence. Crashaw, A Foul Morning.
dulcification (dul'si-fi-ka'shon), n. [= F. dul- dulcorationf (dul-ko-ra'shgn), n. [< ML. dul- There are very few people who do not find a voyage
cification =
Sp. duleifieaeion Pg. dulcifieagito = coratio{n-), < LL. dulcorare, sweeten: see duU which lasts several months insupportably didl.
= It. doleificazione, < L. as if *duleifieatio(^n-), < corate.] The act of sweetening. Macaulay, Warren Hastings.
duleificare, sweeten: see dulcify.] The act of The fourth is in the dulcoration of some metals ; as DuU, dreary flats without a bush or tree.
sweetening the act of freeing from acidity,
; saccharum Saturni, &c. Bacon, Nat. Hist., § 358. Whittier, Bridal of Pennacook.
saltness, or acrimony. E. Phillips, 1706. inanimate
dulcifluous (dul-sif 'lij-us), a. [< ML. duleifluus,
dulcose (dul'kos), n. [< L. duleis, sweet, + 6. Gross ; ; insensible.
-ose.] Same
as duleitol. Looks on the dull earth with disturbed mind.
< L. duleis, sweet, -I- -Jluus, (.Jluere, flow.] Flow- Shak., Venus and Adonis, 1. 340.
ing sweetly. Bailey, 1727. dule (dol), n. Same as dool, a dialectal form of
dolc'i. 7. Not bright or clear; not vivid; dim; ob-
dlUcifT (dvd'si-fi), V. t. pret. and pp. dulcified, ;
duledge (du'lej), n. [Origin not ascertained.] scure as, a dull fire or light ; a dull red color
:
ppr. dulcifying. [< F. dulcifier, < LL. duleificare,
In mech., a peg of wood which joins the ends of the mirror gives a dull reflection.
sweeten, < L. duleis, sweet, -t- facere, make.]
the six fellies that form the round of the wheel One dxdl breath against her glass.
1 To sweeten in old chemistry, to free from
. ;
Noctum.
of a gun-carriage. D. G. Bossetti, Love's
corrosive and sharp-tasting admixtures render ;
more agreeable to the taste. Dules (du'lez), n. [NL. (Cuvier, 1829), irreg. < By night, the interiors of the houses present a more dull
Gr. SoiiTiOi, a slave. Prop. Dulus, as applied to appearance than in the day.
Can you sublime and dulcify J calcine? E. W. Lane, Modern Egyptians,
a genus of birds.] A genus of serranoid fishes,
I. 188.
B. Jonson, Alchemist, li. 1.
characterized by a lash-like extension of a spine 8. Not sharp or acute; obtuse; blunt: as, a
Other beneflclal inventions peculiarly his such as the ;
dulcifying sea-water with that ease and plenty. of the dorsal fin, the body being thus tmder the dull sword a dull needle.
;
Evelyn, To Sir. Wotton. lash, whence the name. The murtherous knife was dull and blunt.
2. To render more agreeable in any sense, dule-tree, n. See dool-tree. Shak., Rich. III., iv. 4
fied in good-humour, Lainb, Artificial Comedy. servitude, < ooiXof, a slave.] An inferior kind Beau, and FL, Knight of Malta, ii. 3.
Dulcified spirit, a compound of alcohol with mineral of worship paid to saints and angels in the Ro- Wielding the dull axe of Decay.
acids as, dulcified spirits of niter.
: man Catholic Church. Also duly, doulia. Whittier, Mogg Megone.
dnlcilOQUyt (dul-sil'o-kwi), n. [= Pg. It. dul- Catholic theologians distinguish three kinds of cultus. 0. Not keenly felt not intense as, a dull pain. ; :
eiloquo. It. also doleiloquo, < LL. duleiloquus, Latria, or supreme worship, is due to God alone, and can- = Syn. 1. Silly, etc. See simple.
sweetly speaking, < L. duleis, sweet, loqui,
sin of idolatry.
+
not be transferred to any creature without the horrible dulll (dul), V.
Dulia is that secondary veneration which
[= E. dial, dill: < ME. dulkn,
speak.] A
soft manner of speaking. Bailey,' Catholics give to saints and angels as the servants and dyllcn, dillen, make dull; < duW^, a.] I. trans.
1731. special friends of God. Lastly, hypenlulia, which U only 1. To make dull, stupid, heavy, insensible, etc.
; ; ;
sity of : as, to dull pain. ception.' See deaf.'] 1. Mute; silent; refrain-
The dome dully tinted with violet mica.
Weep weeping duUt the inward pain.
;
L. Wallace, BenHur, p. 317. ing from speech.
Tennyton, To J. S.
Somewhat + I was dumb with silence I held my peace. Ps. xxxix. 2.
n. intrans. If. To become dull or blunt be- dully [< dull ;
(dul'i), a. -y.]
;
dull. [Poetical.] Dombe as any ston.
come stupid.
Far off she seem'd to hear the duUy sound Thou another booke,
sittest at
Right nought am 1 thurgh youre doctrine, Of human footsteps fall. Tennyson, Palace of Art, Tyl fully dasewyd is thy looke.
I duiU under youre discipline. Chaucer, House of Fame, L 658.
Horn. 0/ tite Sou, 1. 47»2. dulness, n. See dullness. To praise him we sould not be dumm.
Which [wit] mst« and dvU, except it subiect Dnde dulocracyt (du-lok'ra-si), n. [Also written dou- Battle 0/ Uarlaw (Child's Ballads, VII. 189).
Worthy it's worth, whereon it self to grinde. locrucy ; < Gr. Sov/onfiaTia, < doi?.oc, a slave, + Since they never hope to make Conscience dum}}, they
SylKster, tr. of Uu Bartaa's Weeks, i. 6. •Kparia, < Kpareiv, rule. ] Predominance of slaves would have it sleep as much as may be.
a government of or by means Stillingfleet, Sermons, I. xi.
2. To become calm; moderate: as, the wind of slaves. E.
dulled, or dulled down, about twelve o'clock. Phillips, 1706. 2. Destitute of the power of speech ; unable to
[Kare.] —
3. To become deadened in color; dulse (duls), n. [Also dial, dullis,
dillisk; < Gael, duileasg, duileosg Ir. duileasg, =
dilse, dills, utter articulate sounds: as, a deaf and dumb
person; the dMmft brutes. 3. Mute; notaccom- —
lose brightness.
The day had duUed somewhat, and far out among the duilUasg, dulse, perhaps < Gael. Ir. duille, a leaf, panied with or emitting speech or sound : as, a
western Isles that lay along the horizon there was a faint, + (Ir.) uisge, water: see usquebaugh, whisky.^ dumb show; dumb signs.
still mist that inaile them sliadowy and vague.
W. BUtek, A Daughter of Heth, u.
A seaweed, Khodymenia palmata, belonging to Such shapes, such gesture, and such sound, expressing
the order Florideie. it has bright-red, broadly wedge- (Although they want the use of tongue) a kind
dull'' (dul), n. [Oriijin obscure there is no ; shaped fronds, from 6 to 12 Inches long and 4 to 8 inches Of excellent dumb discourse. Shak., Tempest, lit 3.
evidence to connect it with dole^, < L. dolus, a broad. Irregularly cleft or otherwise divided, and. often You shan't come near him none of your dumb signs.
;
bearing frondleta on the margin. It is common between Steele, Lying Lover, ill. 1.
device, artifice, snare, net, < Gr. 66>j>c, a bait
for fish, a snare, net, device, artifice.] noose A tide-marks, and extends into deeper waters, mlhcnng to
the rocks and to other algte. It is eaten in New England Hence —
4. Lacking some usual power, mani-
of string or wire used to snare fish; usually, and in Scotland in Iceland It is an important plant, and
; festation, characteristic, or accomj)animent
a noose of bright copper wir" attached by a is stored In casks to be eaten with fish in Kamtchatka a ;
destitute of reality in some respect; irregular;
fermented liquor is made from it. In the south of England simulative: as, dumb ague; dumb craft. See
short string to a stout pole. [Southern U. 8.]
dllll2 (dul), r. ». [< dulP, «.] To fish with a
this name Is given also to another alga of the same order,
Iriden edulu. —
phrases below. 6. Dull; stupid; doltish. [Lo-
dull : as, to dull for trout. [Southern U. 8.] Wliat dost thoQ here, voting wife, by the water-side. cal, U. S. In Pennsylvania this use is partly
I hope that the barbarous practice called duUing has
Gathering crimson dvlte I Celia Tkaxter, All's Well. due to the G. dwinw.] —
6. Deficient in clear-
gone out of fashion. Forest and Stream, March 11, 1880. Craw dulse, V!Ao<fyn«nui cUiata. [Scotch.] Pepper — ness or brightness, as a color. [Bare.]
dulse, haureneia pinnatifida. [Scotch.) Her stern was painted of a dtimb white or dun colour.
dullard (durjlrd), n. and a. [< ME. duUarde; Dulus (du'lus), n. [NL. (Vieillot, 1816), < Gr. De/oe.
< dull + -ard.] I, n. A dull or stupid person; ioiAof, a slave. The bird used to be called Tan- Deaf and dumb. See deaf-mute.— Dumb afne, a jnipu-
a dolt ; a blockhead ; a dunce. gara esclave.} A
genus of probably vireonine lar name of an irregular intermittent fever, lacking the
usual chill or cold stage; masked fever.— bors- Dumb
They which cannot doe itare hulden duUardt and
holder, an old staff of oflice, serving also as an imple-
blockea. Purchat, Pilgrimage, p. Mi.
ment to lireak open doors and the like in the service of
n. a. Dull; doltish ; .stupid. the law, of whicli an example is preserved at Twyford in
the county of Kent, England, It was made of wood, about
But would I bee a poet if I might.
S feet long, with an iron spike at one end and several iron
To rub my browes three days, and wake three nights,
rings attached, tliroujjh wliich ci.rds could Ik- passed. J.
And bite my nails, and scratch my dullard head? — Dumb
Bp. HaU, Satire*, L iv. A. .4, 1.X. 505.— Dumb compass, .'^ic com/wnii
craft, Unbtcrs anil Iwat." nut liaving sails.- cram- Dumb
dnllardism (dul'Sr-dizm), [< dullard n. + IJO, furnace, etc See the nouns.— Dumb
piano. Same
—
-ixni.] Siiipidity;dolti.shne88. Maunder. [Rare.] as (/j'/f^'rM((/f. — Dumb spinet, .'^aine as vianichord.
To strike dumb, to render silent fiom astonishment;
dull-brained (dul'brand), a. Having a duU confound; astonisn.
brain; being slow to understand or compre- Alas this parting strikes poor lovers dumb.
1
Tbla am
of mine hath chastised
=8yn. 1 and Mute, etc. See silent.
2.
The petty rebel, duU-trrain'd Buckingham.
Shak., Klcb. UI., ir. 4. dumb (dum), V. [< ME. doumben, < AS. d-dum-
bian, intr., become dumb, be silent, < dumb,
dull-browed (dul'broad), a. Having a gloomy dumb: see dumb, a.] I.t intrans. To become
brow or look. Ihtliu dptmimtcMj. dumb be ; sUent.
Let us screw our pampered hearta a pitch beyond the
I doumbed and meked and was ful stille.
reach of dtiZI-frrvuM sorrow. dentirostral oscine birds of the
Indies, West Ps. xxxvlii. 3 (ME. version).
QuarUt, Judgment and Mercy. representing a subfamily Dulinte, the position
H. trans. To make dumb; silence; over-
dnller (dul'6r), It. One who or that which makes of which is unsettled. In some respects it re- power the sound of.
dull. sembles Icteria. D. dominieus is the only es-
An arm-gaunt steed,
Your grace most fly phlebotomy, fresh pork, conger, tablished species. Who neigh'd so high, that what I would have spoke
and clarifled whey ; they are all dultem of the vital spirits. dulwllly (dul'wil-i), «. [E. dial.] The ring- Was beastly dumlid by him. Shak,, A. and C, i. 5.
Beau, and Ft., Philaster. il. 1. plover, ACgialites hiaticula. Montagu.
dumb-bell (dum'bel), n. One
of a pair of
dulleryt (dul'6r-i), n. [= MLG. duUerie; as duly! (du'li), adr. [< ME. dtiely, dewly, dieicly,
weights, each consisting of two balls joined by
dull + -eryl.] Dullness; stupidity. ducliche; < rfuel -1- -ly^.'] In a due manner;
a bar, intended to be swung ip the hands for
Master Antltns of Creaseplota was licentlated, and had when or as due; agreeably to obligation or the sake of muscular exercise, made of iron, or
passed his degrees In all duUery and blocklshness. propriety; exactly; fitly; properly.
Urr/ukart, tr. of Rabelais, IL II. for very light exercise of hard wood.
Vnto my dygnyte dere sail diewly be dyghte
A place full of plente to my plesyng at ply. Brandishing of two sticks, grasped in each hand and
doll-eyed (dul'id), a. Having eyes dull in ex- loatien with plugs of leaii at either end sometimes ; . . .
} ork Plays, p. 1.
pression ; being of dull vision. practised in the present day, and called "ringing of the
Tliat they may have their wages duly paid them.
111 not he made a soft and duU-eifd fool.
And something over to remember me by,
dumb belts." StrutI, Sports and Pastimes, p. 142.
Shak.. M. of v., ill. 3. Shak., Hen. VIII., Iv. 2. dumb-bidding (dum'bid'ing), n. A form of
|dullhead (dul'hed), n. A
person of dull under- As our Saviour, during his forty days' stay on earth, bidding at auctions, where the exposer puts a
^ sttuidiiiK ; a dolt ; a blocknead. fully enabled his ap6stles to attest bis resurrection, so did reserved bid under a candlestick or other cov-
This people (sayth he) he fooles and diUhede* to all he qualify them duly to preach bis doctrine. ering, and no sale is effected unless the bidding
Bp. Atterbury, Sermons, II. viL
gondnes. A$eham, The Scholeroaater, p. 76. comes up to that.
Seldom at church, 'twas such a linsy life ;
dullish ((lul'ish), a. [< dull -Mftl.] +
Some- But duly sent his family and wife. dumb-cake (dum'kak), n. A cake made in si-
what dull. Pope, Moral Essays, ill. 382. lence on St. Mark's Eve, with numerous cere-
;; ;; : ; ;
ing, a metal cleat bolted to the after part of Eciuall to the Cranck in dissembling is the DumiMrar; Tune a deploring dump. Shak., T. G. of V., iii. 2.
the stem-post, for one of the rudder-pintles to for, as the other takes vpon him to haue the falling sick-
nesse, so this counterfets Dunibnes. (c) Any tune.
play on. Dekker, Belman of London (cd. 1608), sig. D, 3. O, play me some merry dump, to comfort me.
dumb-craft (dum'kr&ft), n. An instrument Every village almost will yield abundant testimonies Shak., R. and J., Iv. 5.
somewhat similar to the screw-jack, having [of counterfeits] amongst us we have dummerers, <Sc. ; dump2 (dump), V. [< ME. dumpen, rarely dam-
wheels and pinions which protrude a ram, the Burton, Anat. of Mel., p. 159. pen, tr. cast down suddenly, intr. fall down sud-
point of which communicates the power. dumminess (dum'i-nes), n. The character of denly (not in AS.); = Norw. dumpa, fall down
dumbfound, dumbfounder. See dumfound, being dumb ; stupidity. suddenly, fall or leap into the water, = Sw. dial.
dumfoKiidcr. A little anecdote . which
. . . . . strikingly illustrates dumpa, make a noise, dance clumsily, dampa,
dumblel (dum'bl), a. [E. dial., < rfwraft -I- dim. the dumminess of a certain class of the English popula- fall downsuddenly,=Icel. «?«»(/)« (once), thump,
or freq. term. -te.] Stupid ; very dull. Malli- tion. C. A. Bristed, English University, p. 292, note.
= Dan. dumpe, intr. thump, plump, tr. dip, as
well. dummy (dum'i), «. Sc. dumbie and a. [= a gun, = D. dampen, tr., dip, as a gun, dampelen,
dumble^t (dum'bl), n. [E. dial., = dimhle, q. v.] dim. of dumb, dum.] I. «. dummies (-iz). ;
pi. tr., plunge, dip, immerse, = LG. dumi>eln, intr.,
Same as dimble. 1. One who is dumb; a dumb person; a mute. drift about, be tossed by wind and waves all
dumbledore (dum'bl-dor), «. [E. dial., also [CoUoq.] — 2. One who is silent ; specifically, from a strong verb repr. by Sw. dinipa, pret.
;
written dumblcdor; < 'dumble D. dommelcn, = in theat., a person on the stage who appears be- damp, pp. neut. dumpit, fall down, plump. Cf.
buzz, mimible, slumber, doze (perhaps ult. imi- fore the lights, but has nothing to say. 3. One — thump.] I. trans. 1. To throw down violently
tative, like bumble-, huniblebee), + dore, dor, a who or that which lacjis the reality, force, func- plunge; tumble. [Obsolete, except as a Col-
bumblebee, a black beetle, a cockchafer: see tion, etc., which it appears to possess; some- loquialism in the United States as, the bully :
dor^.1 1. The bumblebee. thing that imitates a reality in a mechanical was dumped into the street.]
Betsy called it [the monk's hood] the dumbled(yre'8 de- way or for a mechanical purpose. Specifically— Than sail the rainbow descend. . . .
light. Soulhey, The Doctor, viii. (o) »ome object made up to deceive, as a sham package, Witjhj the wind than sail it mell,
a wooden cheese, an imitation drawer, etc. (b) Some- And driue th.am dun all vntil hell
2. The brown cockchafer. thing used as a block or model in exhibiting articles of
adv. [< dumb + -ly^.l Mute- And dump the deuls [devils] thider in.
dumbly (dimi'll), dress, etc. (e) A specimen or sample of the size and Cursor Mundi, X. 22689.
ly; silently; without speech or sound. appearance of something which is to be made, as a book
composed of sheets of blank paper bound together, (d) Kene men sail the kepe.
Cross her hands liumbly,
.Something employed to occupy or mark temporarily a par-
And do the dye on a day,
As if praying dumbly^ ticular space in any arrangement of a number of articles.
And domp the in the depe.
Over lier breast. Hood, Bridge of Sigha. Minot, Poems (ed. RItson), p. 47.
4. In mech. (a) : dumb-waiter. (6) A loco- A
dumbness (dum'nes), w. 1. Muteness silence; ;
motive with a condensing-engine, and hence 2. To put or throw down, as a mass or load
abstention from speech ; absence of sound. avoiding the noise of escaping steam used es- :
of anything unload especially, to throw down
; ;
Talte lience that once a Icing ; that sullen pride pecially for moving railroad-cars in the streets or cause to fall out by tilting up a cart: as, to
That swells to dumbnesg. of a city, or combined in one with a passenger- dump a stickful of type (said by printers) ; to
Dryden, Don Sebastian, iii. 1.
car for local or street traffic, (c) The name dump bricks, or a load of brick. [U. S.]
2. Incapacity for speaking ; inability to utter given by firemen to one of the jets from the The equipage of the campaign is dumjted near the store-
articulate sounds. See deafness. mains or chief water-pipes, (d) hatters' A cabin, ir. Barrows, Oregon, p. 137.
dining-room for conveying food, etc. When the of a bright-blue color, occurring in fibrous forms
Hence dumpy, dumpling.] 1. The sound of a
kitchen is in the basement story the dumb-waiter is bal- in the gneiss of Chaponost near Lyons, and else- heavy object falling; a thud.— 2. Anything
'
anced by weights, so as to move readily up and down by the where. short, thick, and heavy. Hence 3. A clumsy —
agency of cords and pulleys. The name is also given to a medal of lead formerly made by casting in
small table or stand, sometimes with a revolving top, placed dumose, dumous
(du'mos, dii'mus), a. [< L.
dumosus, dummosus, OL. dusmosus, bushy, < <J«- moist sand specifically, a leaden counter used
;
at a person's side in the dining-room, to hold dessert, etc.,
until required. »i!<«, a thorn-bush, a bramble : see dumal.] 1. by boys at chuckfarthing and similar games.
existing are generally impressed with char-
right
Mr. Meagles
hand
. . . gave a turn to the ditmb-waiter on his
to twirl the sugar towards himself.
having a compact, bushy form. 2.
In bot., — The dumps still
acters, often letters, perhaps the initials of the maker.
Dickens, Little Dorrit, i. 16.
in bushes and briers. Abounding Thy taws are brave, thy tops are rare,
dump^ (dump), n. [< *dun>p, adj., Sc. dumph, Our tops are spun with coils of care.
dumetose (du'me-tos), a. [< L. dumetum, dum- dull, insipid prob. < Dan. dump, dull, low, hol- ;
Our dumps are no delight.
metum, OL. dumectum, a thicket, < dumus, a low, = G. dumpf, damp, musty, dull, esp. of Hood, Ode on Prospect of Clapham Academy.
bramble see dumal.'] In bot, bush-like.
:
sound, low, heavy, indistinct, muffled (< MHG. 4. A small coin of Australia.
dumfotmd, dumbfound (dum-found'), " * dimpfen, steam, reek); cf. D. dompig, damp, The small colonial coin denominated dumps have aU
[Orig. a djal. or slang word, < dumb + appar. hazy, misty, = LG. dumpig, damp, musty, = been called in. Sydney Gazette, January, 1823.
-found in confound.] To strike dumb confuse Sw. dial, dumpin, melancholy (pp. of dimba,
;
If the dollar passes current for five shillings, the dump
stupefy; confound. steam, reek), »w. dumpig, damp see below. :
lays claim to fifteen pence value still in silver money.
Sydney Gazette, January, 1823.
Words which would choke a Dutchman or a Jew, Cf D. dampen, quench, put out from the same
. ;
BumfouTui Old Nick, and which from me or you Money; "chink." [Slang.]
Could not be forced by ipecacuanha. source as damp, q. v.] 1. A dull, gloomy state 5. pi.
of the mind; sadness; melancholy; sorrow; May I venture to say when a gentleman jumps
Drop from his oratorio lips like manna. Soulhey.
In the river at midnight for want of the dumps.
I waited doggedly to hear him [Landor] begin his cele- heaviness of heart: as, to be in the dumps. He rarely puts on his knee-breeches and pumps?
bration of them [pictures], dumfownded between my moral [Regularly used only in the plural, and usually Barham, Ingoldsby Legends, II. 37.
obligation to be as truthful as I dishonestly could and my in a humorous or derogatory sense.]
social duty not to give offense to my host. 6. Aplace for the discharge of loads from
iMwell, The Century, XXXV. 614. Some of our poore familie be fallen into such dumpes, carts, trucks, etc., by dumping; a place of de-
that scantly can any such cumfort as my poore uit can
Fosit for offal, rubbish, or any
dumfounder, dimibfounder (dum-foun'der), coarse material.
geue them any thing asswage their sorow.
V. t. [Another form of dumfound, apparent- Sir T. More, Cumfort against Tribulation (1573), fol. 3. U. S.]
ly simulating founder^, sink.] Same as dum- Why, how now, daughter Katharine? In your dumps f A sort of platform on the edge of the dump. There, m
Shak., 1. of the S., 1. old days, the trucks were tipped and the loads sent thun-
found. [Rare.] ii.
The Century, XXVII. 191.
Gent. But where's my lady? dering down the chute.
There but one way to browbeat this world,
is
dumps
Dumb/ounder doubt, and repay scorn in kind — Pet. In her old within, monstrous melancholy. We sat by the margin of the dttmp and saw, far below
Fletcher, Loyal Subject, v. 2. us, the green tree-tops standing still in the clear air.
To go on trusting, namely, till faith move
His head like one in doleful dump The Century, XXVII. 38.
Mountains. Browning, Ring and Book, I. 114.
Between his knees. The next point Is to get sufficient grade or fall to carry
Dnmicola (du-mik'o-la), 11. [NL. (Swainson, ,Sr. nutter, Hudibras, II. i. 106. away the inmiense masses of dSbris that is, the miner :
1831, as Dumecola), < L. dumus, a bramble, + I know not whether it was the dumps or a budding ec- has to look out for bis "dump."
eolere, inhabit.] A
genus of South American stasy. Thoreau, Waldeo, p, 242. Mistier, Mod. High Explosives, p. 278.
; ; :
;: :
.
down ; ult. from the verb represented by dump^, If snow be white, why then her breasts are dun. tion set in, when the reformers and humanists,
r.] A deep hole filled with water. Grose, [Prov. Shak., Sonnets, cxxx. regarding them as obstinate opponents of
Eus:.] They [sea-lions]have no hair on their bodies like the sound learning and of progress, and their phi-
dumpage (dum'paj), «. l< dump'^ -age."] 1. + seal ; they are of a dun colour, and are all extraordinary losophy as sophistical and barren, applied the
The privilege oi dumping loads from carts,
fat. Dumpier, Voyages, an. 1683. term Duns man, which at first meant simply a
trucks, etc., on a particular spot. [U. 8.] 2. — And deer-skfns, dappled, dun, and white.
Scott, L. of the lu, 27.
Seotist, to any caviling, sophistical opponent;
The fee paid for such privilege. [U. S.] 2. Dark; gloomy.
i.
and so it came finally tomean any dull, obsti-
damp-bolt (dump'bolt), n. la ship-building, a nate person.] If. [cap.] A disciple or fol-
" O is this water deep," he said,
short bolt used to hold planks temporarily. lower of John Duns Scotus (see etymology);
'*
As it is wondrous dun ? "
dnmp-car (dump'kar), ri. A dumpmg-car. Sir Roland (Child's Ballads, I. 226).
a Dunce-man ; a Seotist. Tyndale.
dump-cart (dump'kart), n. Same as tip-cart. He then sitfvey'd Scotista [It.], a follower of Scotus, as we say a Dunce.
damper (dum'per), n. One who or that which Hell and the foilt between, and Satan there Florio.
dumps .specifically, a tip-cart. [U. 8.]— Double
dumper, a
;
beail>~l w-rew. See YUvtl. the name. O'Curry, Anc. Irish, II. xix. brandy comes from." Scott, Old Mortality.
dumreicherite (dOm'ri-6h6r-it), n. p^amed dunbird(dun'b6rd),n. 1. The common pochard dunch* (dunch), a. [Appar. a 'var. of dunce.]
after Huron von DMmreicher of Lisbon.] A hy- or red-headed duck, Fuligula ferina. 2. The Deaf. Grose. [Prov. Eng.] —
drous sulphate of magnesium and aluminium, ruddy duck, Krismatura rubida. Nuttall, 18.34. dunche-downf, dunse-downt, «• [So called
related to the alnms, found in the volcanic —
3. The female scaup duck, FuXigula marila. "bycauso the downo of this herbe will cause
rocks of the Cape Verd islands. [Essex, Eng.] one to be deafe, if it happens to fall into the
; ;
I have no patience with the foolish duncical dog. Dyogenes lay in a smalle dongeon,
Richardson, Clarissa Harlowe, VIII. 100.
The long low dune, and lazy-plunging sea. In sondre wedyrs which turnyd as a balle.
Tennyson, Last Tournament. Political Poenis, etc. (ed. Furnivall), p. 27.
dnncifyf (dun'si-fi), v. t. [< dunce + -i-fy, dune^ (diin), [See dMw3.] An ancient fort
re. They brought him [Joseph] hastily out of the dungeon.
make.] To make dull or stupid ; reduce to the Gen. xli.
with a hemispherical or conical roof. [Scotch.] 14.
condition of a dunce.
dunfish (dun'fish), n. [< rf««i, a. and v. t., + The King
of Heaven hath doom'd
Here you have a fellow ten thousand times more dunci- This place our dungeon, not our safe retreat.
fish.'i Codfish cured by dunning, especially for
Jied than dunce Webster. Milton, P. L., ii. 317.
Warburton, To Hurd, Letters, cxxx. use on the table uncooked. The fish are first slack-
salted and cured, then taken down cellar and allowed to dungeon (dun'jun), v. t. [< dungeon, n.] To
dnncisll (dun'sish), a. [< dunce + -ishK] Like "give up," and then dried again. Great pains are taken confine in or as in a dungeon.
a dunce; sottish. Imp. Diet. in this mode
of preparation, even to the extent of cover-
Dungeoned up in the darkness of our ignorance.
duncislmess (dun'sish-nes), The character n. ing the "fagots" with bed-quilts to keep them clean.
[New Eng.] Bp. Hall, Kemains, p. 128.
or quality of a dunce folly. Westminster Rev.
;
You said nothing
dun-cow (dun'kou), n. In Devonshire speech, dungl (dung), n. [< ME.
dung, dong, rarely Of how I might be dungeoned as a madman.
di7ig, < AS. dung, also dyng (in glosses badly Shelley, The Cenci, Ii. 1.
the shagreen ray, Baia fullonica, a batoid fish.
duncur (dung'kfer), n. The pochard or dun- written dingc and dinig) =OFries. dung.Fries. dungeoner (dun'jim-er), n. One who impris-
bird. Also duiiker. [Prov. Eng.] =
dong OHGr. tunga, MHG. tunge, dung, G. dung ons or keeps in jail; a jailer. [Poetical.]
Dundee pudding. See pudding. (with LG. d) (at. MHG. tunger, G. diinger, ma-
That most hateful land,
dunder^ (dun'der), n. A
dialectal variant of nure) =
Sw. dynga, muck, =
Dan. dynge, a heap, Dungeoner of my friend. Keats, To .
Here, without staying for my reply, shall I be called as Shak., K, John, Iv. 3.
many blockheads, numskulls, dotldypoles, dunderheads,
cow-dung and warm water in order to remove
nimiy-liammers, Ac. Sterne, Tristram Shandy, ix. 25. the superfluous mordant. II, a. Sprung from the dunghill; mean;
II, intrans. To void excrement.
low; base.
dunderheaded (dun ' d6r - hed " ed), a. Like a Unfit are dunghill knights
dunderliead or dunce. G. A. Sola. dung2 (dung). Preterit and past participle of
To serve the town with spear in field. Qooge.
dunderpate (duu'der-pat) n. [< dunder''- (see You must not suffer your thoughts to creep any longer
dunderliead) + pate.'\ Same as dunderhead. dungaree (dung-ga-re'), «. [Anglo-Ind., low, upon this dunghill earth.
Many a dunderpate,
common, vulgar.]
like the owl, the stupidest of birds,
coarse cotton stuff, gen- "
A Bp. Beveridge, Works, II, cxxxvii.
comes to be considered the very type of wisdom. erally blue, worn by sailors.
Dunghill fowl, a mongrel or cross-bred specimen of the
IrciTiff, Knickerbocker, p. 148. The crew have all turned tailors, and are making them- common hen a barn-yard fowl, ;
selves new suits from some dungaree we bought at Val- dunghill-raker (dung'hil-ra'kfer), n. The com-
dunderpoU (dun'd6r-p61), n. [< dunder^ (see paraiso. Lady Brassey, Voyage of Sunbeam, I. xii. mon dunghill fowl. [A nonce-word.]
dunderhead) + poll^.] Same as dunderhead.
BalHwell. [Prov. Eng. (Devonshire).] dung-bath (dung'bath), n. In dyeing, a bath The dunghill-raker, spider, hen, the chicken too, to me
dnnder-whelp (dun'dfer-hwelp), n. [< dunder^ used in mordanting, composed of water in have taught a lesson, Bunyan, Pilgrim's Progress, ii.
(see dunderhead) + whelp.'] A dunderhead; which a small proportion of cows' or pigs' dung, dung-hook (dung'huk), n. An agricultural im-
a blockhead. or some substitute for it, has been dissolved, plement for spreading manure.
What a puiblind puppy was I now I remember him with a certain amount of chalk to remove the dung-hunter (dung'hun'ter), n. One of the
!
All the whole cast on 's face, though it were umber'd, acetic acid from the printed material. See species of jaeger or skua-gull, of the genus Ster-
And mask'd with patches : what a dunder-whelp, dunging. corarius. The birds are so called from their supposed
To let him domineer thus 1
dung-beetle (dung'be'tl), ». 1. A common Eng- habits but in reality they harass other gulls and terns to
;
dune, =
Or. dune, a dune, =
Dan. Sw. dyner, pi., domejo (ML. reflex dunjo{n-), dungeo(n-), don- Full of dung; foul; vile.
< LG. diinen, pi., =
Fries, diinen (also diininge, jio(n-), dangio{n-), domgio(n-), etc.), < ML. There's not a grain of it [honesty], the face to sweeten
dum) =
D. duin, a dune, =
E. down^, a hill see : domnio(n-), a dungeon (tower), contr. from Of the whole dungy earth. Shak., W. T., ii. 1.
dojcni.] A
mound, ridge, or hill of loose sand, and a particular use of ML. dominio(n-), do- yard or inclosure A
heaped up by the wind on the sea-coast, or rare- main, dominion, possession: see dominion, do-
dung-yard (dung'yard), m.
ly on the shore of a large lake, as on Lake Su- where dung is collected.
main, demain, demesne.'] 1. The principal tow-
perior. Hills of loose sand at a distance from the coast, er of a medieval castle, it was usually raised on a
dunite (dun'it), «. [So called from l>un Moun-
or in the interior of a cormtry, are soinetinies called by tain, near Nelson, New Zealand.]
natural or artificial mound and situated in the innermost
rock con- A
French authors dune»; but this is not the usage in Eng- court or bailey, and formed a last refuge into which the sisting essentially of a crystalline granular mass
llah. Jkiaodoum. garrison could retreat la case of necessity. Its lower or of olivin with chromite or picotite, containing
—
dnnlte 179» duodenal
also frequently more or less of various other dnnner (dun'fer), n. One who duns; one em- dunter-goose (dun'tfer-gos), n. Same as dun-
minerals, alteration products of the olivin. ployed in soliciting payment of debts. ter. Symonds.
Dunite appears to be frequently more or less They are ever talking of new silks, and serve the owners duntle (dun'tl), V. t. ; pret. and pp. duntled, ppr.
altered into .seqjentine. in getting them customers, as their common duntterg do duntliug. [Freq. of dtjni.] To dent; mark with
in making them pay. Spectator. an indentation. [Prov. Eng.]
dmuwassal, dunniewassal (diin-i-was'al), «.
[Bepr. Gael. a gentleman duirie, a dunniewassal, «. See duniwassal.
</«i«' «<'*«/, : His cap is duntled in ; his back bears fresh stains of
man i«i»a/, gentle.] Among the Highlanders dnnniness (<lun'i-nes), n. [< dunny + -ness.']
;
peat. Kingdey, Two Years Ago, Int.
of Scotland, a gentleman, especially one of sec- Deafness. Bailey, 1731. [Kare.] duo (dii'6), n. [It., a duet, also two, < L. duo
ondary rank; a cadet of a family of rank. dunning (dun'ing), n. [Verbal n. of rfunl, r.] = E. two.] The same as duet, a distinction is
His bonnet had a short feather, which indicated his The process of curing codfish in a way to give sometimes made by using d\iet for a two-part composition
cUlm to be treated as a Duinhe-WattUl, or sort of gentle- them a particular color and flavor. See dioii, for two voices or instruments of the same kind, and duo
man. Seott, Warerley, xvi. for such a composition for two voices or instruments of
r. t., and dunfish.
different kinds.
dnnkadoo (dung-ka-dS'), u. [Imitative.] The dnnnish (dun'ish), a. [< dun^ + -»«7»l.] In-
(Lord's Day.) Up, and, while I^taid for the barber, tried
Aimriean bitteru,\Boto«r«s mugitans or lenti- clined to a dun color; somewhat dun.
to compose a duo of counter point : and 1 think it will do
qinnsiis. [Local, New Eng.] dtumock (dun'ok), n. [E. dial. (Northampton) very well, it being by Mr. Berkenahaw's rule.
I)tmkard (dung'kard), «. Same as Dunker^. also doney; < ME. donek, < donnen, dunnen, dun, Pepyg, Diary, II. 312.
Dnnker^ Ttmker (dung'-, tung'kfer), n. [< G. Hareton has been cast out like an unfledged duniwck. duodecanedral, duodecahedron (du-o-dek-a-
tuiiLvr, a dipper, < tunken, MHG. tunken, dunken,
E. Bronte, Wuthering Heights, iv. he'dral, -dj'on). See dodecahedral, dodecalie-
OHG. tUHchoH, duncMn, thunkon, dip, immerse, dunny (dun'i), a. [E. dial.; origin obscure. dron.
perhaps ult. =
L. tingere Gr. =
wet, riyyetv, Cf. aonnerd.'] duodecennial (du'6-de-sen'i-al), a. [< LL.
Deaf; dull of apprehension.
moisten, dye, stain : see tinge.'] member of A [Local, Great Britain.] duodecennis, of twelve years (i L. duodecim,
a sect of German-American Baptists, so named My old dame, Joan, is something dunny, and will scarce twelve, annus, a year), -al.] Consisting of + +
from their manner of baptism. Their proper know how to manage. Scott. twelve years. Ash.
church-name ia Brethren. Driven from Germany t»y per-
•ecution early in the eighteenth centur>', they took ref- dunpickle (dun'pikl), n. The raoor-buzzard. duodecimal (du-o-des'i-mal), a. and n. [< L.
Circus wruginosus. Montagu. [Local, Eng.]
duodecim (= Gr. Svuieaa, Smcko), twelve (< duo
nge in Pennsylvania, and thence extended tlieir societies
Into neightiorinK .States, and are especially found in Ohio. dunrobin (dim'rob'in), n. superior kind of E. tKO,
Adecern E. ten), -al. = Cf. dozen, + = +
They condemn all war and litigation, acknowledge the au- Scotch pliiid. ult. < duodecim, and see decimal.] I. a. Beck-
thority of the Bible, administer baptism by triple immer- oning by twelves and powers of twelve: as,
sion, and only to adults, practise washing of the feet liefore dunst, dunset, «. Obsolete forms of dunce.
Che Lord's supper, use the kias of charity, Uyingon of hands, dunse-downt, « See dunche-down, duo^cimal multiplication.
and anointing with oil, and oljeerve a severe simplicity in dunseryt, " An obsolete form of duncery. The duodecimal system in liquid measures, which .Is
dreM and speech. They have bishops, elders, and teachers, [A book-form repr. AS. found elsewhere, appears to be derived from the Babylo-
and are oommoDly soppoeed to accept the doctrine of uni- dnnsett
(dun'set), «.
nians. V(tn Jianke, Univ. Hist, (trans.), p. 19.
Tenal redemption. Also called Dipper. dunsSte, dUnsete, pi., a term applied to a cer-
dnnker- (dung'k^r), n. Same as duncur. tain division of the Welsh people, lit. hill-dwell- Duodedmal arithmetic or scale. See duodenary arith-
viftic or scale, under duodenary.
Dvinkirk lace. Seie kiee. ers, < din, a hill (see (toirnl), steta (= OHG. +
n. ». 1. One of a system of numerals the
dunlin (dun'lin), n. [A
dunlintj, the proper form, < dun^
corruption of E. dial. sdio), a dweller, settler, < sittan (pret. stet), sit.
base of which is twelve. 2. pi. An arithmeti-
dim. -ling^. Cf. coteef.] One of the hill-dwellers of Wales; cal rule for ascertaining the number of square
+
—
Cf. dunbird, dunnoek.'j The red-backed sand- a settler in a hill country. feet, twelfths of feet, and square inches in a
piper, Tringa (Pelidna) alpina, widely dispersed dunsh, <°. ' See dunch^. rectangular area or surface whose sides are
and very abundant in the northern hemisphere, dunaicalt, a. See dundcal. given in feet and inches and twelfths of inches.
especially along sea-coasts, during the extensive dunslyt, Duns-mant. See duncely. Dunce-man. The feet of the multiplier are first multiplied into the
dunst (dunst), II. Akiudof flour; flue semolina feet, Inches, and twelfths of the multiplicaml, giving
without bran or germs. The Miller (London). S4|uare feet, twelfths, and inches. The inches of the mul-
are then multiplied into the feet and inches of the
dunstable (duu'sta-bl), a. and n. [In allusion tiplier multiplicand, giving twelfths of feet and square inches,
to Dunstable in England, the adj. use (as in and finally the twelfths of inches of the multiiilier are
def.) being derived &om the word as used in the multiplied into the feet of the multiplicand, giving s<]iiaro
phrase Dunstable road or icny.] I,t a, [cap.] Inches. These three partial products are then ndiltd to-
gether to get the product sought. It is used by artificers.
Plain; direct; simple; downright. duwiecimal cross multiplication.
Also called or
Your uncle Is an odd, but a very honest, Dunstable soul. duodecimally (du - o - des ' i - mal - i), adv. In a
liichardton, .Sir Charles Grandison, VI. 177.
duoilocimnl manner; bjr twelves.
Dnnatable road, way, "r blgbway, the way to Dun-
duodecimfid (du'o-de-sim'fid), a. [< L. duode-
used proverbially as a symlKU of plainness or di-
stable
rectness.
:
dunt, dynt, etc.: see dint and dent^.] 1. A 5t by 7J inches. Often written 12mo or 12°.
dnnling (dun 'ling), n. A dialectal (and origi-
stroke ; a blow. [Scotch and prov. Eng.] duodecimole (du-o-des'i-mol), «. [< L. duo-
niiUy more correct) form of
dunlin.
I hae a gude braid sword, decimus, twelfth: 'see duodecimo.] In music, a
donlop fdun'lop), n. A
rich white kind of I'll t»k <funf< frae naelmdy. group of twelve notes to be performed in the
cheese made in Scotland out of unskimmed my Aln.
BurTu, I ha'e a Wife o*
time of eight; a dodecuplet.
milk: so called from the parish of Dunlop in
Ayrshire.
2. A malady characterized by staggering, ob- DuodeciinpennatsB (dii'6-de-sim-pe-na'te),
served particularly in yearling lambs. [Prov. n. pi. [NL., < L. duodecim, twelve, + penna-
dnniutge (dun'aj), n. [Origin unknown.] 1.
Fagots, boughs, or loose wood laid in the hold
Eng.] —
3. Palpitation. Dunglison. [Scotch.] tus, winged, feathered.] In ornith., in Sunde-
dunt (dunt), r. [A var. of dint, dent^: see dint, vall's system, a cohort of Gallinw, composed of
of a ship to raise heavy goods above the bot- dent^, p.] I. trans. 1. To strike; give a blow the American curassows and guans, Crarida;:
tom ana prevent injury from water ; also, loose to ; knock. [Scotch and prov. Eng.] so called from the 12 reetriees or tail-feathers.
artielefl of lading wedged between parts of the
Fearing the wrathful ram might dunt out the Also called Sylvicolte.
.
cargo to hold them steady and prevent injury he had any, of the yoons cavalier they opened
. .
He that hates truth shall be the dupe of lies. they pass upon an end or aim of difficulty or ambition,
dtiodene (dii'o-den), K. [< L. duodeni, twelve they duplicate, and grow to a disturbance.
each: see duodenary, Cf. duodenum.'] In mu- Cowper, Progress of Error.
Jer. Taylor, Works (ed. 1835), I. 104.
sical theory, a group of twelve tones, having pre- When the spirit is not master of the world, then it is its
dupe. Emerson, Essays, 1st ser., p. 229. has to duplicate, i. e., to celebrate twice in
If the Priest
cise acoustical relations with one another, ar- one day, he must not drink the ablutions, which must be
ranged so as to explain and correct problems in dupe (dup), V. t. ; pret. and pp. duped, ppr. poured into a chalice and left for liim to consume at the
harmony and modulation. Any tone whatever may duping. [< F. duper, dupe, gull, take in; from second celebration. For to drink the ablutions would be
be chosen as the root, and ita symbol is called a dnodenal. the noun.] To deceive; trick; mislead by im- to break his fast.
The root, the major third above, and the major third be- posing on one's credulity as, to dupe a person F. G. Lee, Directorium Anglicanum, 4th ed. (1879), p. 248.
:
low it constitute the initialtrine. The duodene consists by flattery. duplicate (du'pli-kat), a. and ti. [= It. dupli-
of four such trines, one being the initial trine, one a per-
fect fifth below it, one a perfect fifth above it, and one Ne'er have I duped him with base counterfeits. cato =
D. duplikaat =
G. Dan. dupUkat, < L.
two perfect fifths above it. The term and the process of Coleridge. duplicatus, pp. of duplicare, make double : see
analysis to which it belongs were first used by A. J. Ellis Instead of making civilization the friend of the poor, it duplicate, vi] I. a. 1. Double; twofold; con-
in England in 1874. The study of the process is incident [the theory of social equality] has duped the poor into sisting of or relating to a pair or pairs, or to two
to the attempt to secnre just intonation (pure tempera- making themselves the enemies of civilization. corresponding parts: as, duplicate spines in an
W. H. Matlock, Social Equality, p. 211.
duodenitis (du'o-dMu'tis), w. [NL., < dt/orfc- insect; duplicate examples of an ancient coin;
j„„„„. .i.4.„ , „„vi» o J ^
num + .itis.-\ liflammatiok of the duodenum. OliPeaDility. dupeable.
I-,;
See dupabthty, dupa- duplicate proportion. —
2t. Consisting of a dou-
duodenostomy (du"o-de-nos'to-mi), n. NL. ^,'f." ,,^,-,,^.^s „
[<
ble number or quantity; multiplied by two.
duodenum, q. v., + (Jr. arS/^a, mouth, opening.] dliperjdu pfer), n. [< dupe + -crl ; after OF. The estates of Bruges little doubted to admit so small a
The surgical formation of an external opening (and F.) dupeur, a deceiver.] One who dupes or numbre into so populous a company, yea though the num-
from the duodenum through the abdominal deceives ; a cheat ; a swindler. bre were duplicate. Hall, Hen. VII., an. 6.
wall. The race-ground had its customary complement of 3. Exactly like or corresponding to something
duodenum (du-o-de'num), n. pi. duodena (-na). knaves and fools — the dupers and the duped. made or done before; repeating an original;
; Bulwer, Pelham, I. xii.
[NL. (so called because in man it is about twelve matched: as, there are many duplicate copies
finger-breadths long),< L. duodeni, twelve each dupery {du'p6r-i), n. [< F. duperie, < dupe, a of this picture ; a duplicate action or proceed-
dupe The art of deceiving or
see dupe, «.]
see duodenary.] 1. In anat., the first portion
of the small intestine, in immediate connection
:
with the Stomach, receiving the hepatic and or methods of a duper. firstterm is said to be to the third in the dujtlicate ratio of
Travelling from town to town in the full practice of du- the first to the second, or as its square is to the square of
pancreatic secretions, and usually curved or the second. Thus, in 9 16 :: 15 25, the ratio of 9 to 25 is
pery and wheedling. /. D' Israeli, Amen, of Lit., I. 304. : :
folded about the pancreas, it extends from the a duplicate of that of 9 to 15, or as the square of 9 is to
pylorus to the beginning of the jejunum. In man it is Itmight be hard to see an end to the inquiry were we the square of 15 also, the duplicate ratio of a to 6 is the
;
from 10 to 12 inches in length. See cuts under alimentary once to set diligently to work to examine and set forth ratio of a a to ft 6 or of a*-^ to W.
and intestine. how much innocent dupery we habitually practise upon II, n. 1. One of two or more things corre-
ourselves in the region of metaphysics.
2. In entom., a short smooth portion of the in- sponding in everj- respect to each other.
Body »"<'"'".
Maudsley, -""^ p. •"
and Will, p- 23.
testine, between the ventriculus and the ileum, . ^
(du f"""-^. Of all these he [Vertue] made various sketches and notes,
. .
duple (dii'pl), V. t. ; pret. and pp. dupled, ppr. a first or original ; another of the same kind a
duomo (dwo'mo), n. [It., a dome, cathedral: copy: as, a duplicate of a bust.
;
see dome^.] A
cathedral; properly, an Italian dupling. [< duple, a.] To double. [Rare.]
Many duplicates of the General's
cathedral. See dome^. duplet (du'plet), n. [< L. duplus, double, E. + wagon stand about the
Bright vignettes, and each complete,
dim. -et.] A doublet. [Rare.] churcli in every direction.
W. M. Baker, New Timothy, p. 72.
Of tower or duomo, sunny-sweet. That is to throw three dice till duplets and a chance be
Tennyson, The Daisy. thrown, and the highest duplet wins. duplication (dii-pli-ka'shqn), n. [= F. dtipli-
The bishop is said to have decorated the duomo with Dryden, Mock Astrologer, iii. cation = Pr. duplicatio = Sp. dupUeacion = Pg.
500 large and 200 small columns brought from Paros for duplCX (du'pleks), a. and n. [< L. duplex, dou-
duplicagao =
It. dupUcasionc, < L. duplicatio(n-),
the purpose.
C. C. Perkins, Italian Sculpture, Int., p. rxxv., note.
ble, twofold, < duo, E. two,= +
plicare, fold.] I. < duplicare, pp. duplicatus, double : see dupli-
a. Double; twofold. Specifically applied in electricity cate, v.] 1. The act of duplicating, or of mak-
dupt (dup), [Contr. of dial, do up, open, <
V. t. to a system of telegraphy in which two messages are trans- ing or repeating something essentially the same
ME. do up, don up, open : see do\ and of. d!o»i, mitted at the same time over a single wire: it includes as something previously existing or done.
doff, dout^.] To open. both diplex and eontraplex. See these words.— Duplex
However, if two sheriffs appear in one year (as at this
What Devell iche weene, the porters are drunke wil
escapement of a watch. See escapement. Duplex — time and frequently hereafter), such dujdication cometh
! ; Idea, lathe, pelltti. See the nouns.— Duplex querela
they not dup the gate to-day? (eccles.), a. double quarrel (which see, under quarrel). to pass by one of these accidents.
R. Edwards, Damon and Pythias.
II. ». A
doubling or duplicating. Fuller, Worthies, Berkshire.
Then up he rose and donn'd his clothes. duplex (du'pleks), V. 2. In arith., the multiplication of a number by
[< duplex, a.] I, trans.
And dupp'd the chamber door.
Shak., Hamlet,
In teleg., to arrange (a wire) so that two mes- two. —
3. Afolding; adoubling; also, a fold: as,
t^^li^J t
n ,*, "l*^-^-
t^ii^llTir."* \l />«/''<C'rf«;n<«'.; T
'" 8eed«re.]"l. Same as rfwramen.-
having four ^^ter (which see). Wilder
and Gage.
^
2. Thedura
marvellous durante.
Of
Sandys, Travailes, p. 24.
how short durance was this new made
Dryden, State of Innocence,
state
^^^
^n-h
llTTdZ *r other r^'^^J
iLh- H the
"*"***'^ behind
fi.
two, of
durabiUtv T^
(du-ra-bil'i-ti), n. [= Dan. Sw. du-
rabiUtet,h\durabilitHOV.durelAetc)=.VT.du.
The durance of a granite ledge. Emernon, Astrroa.
v. 1.
^^P^"""^' "« "^ rahlctat= Pg. durabilidade = It. durabilitd, < 2. Imprisonment restraint of the person ; in-
th h,re r^tlbrt' l^^vl C ;
It.durabile, < L. durabilis, lasting, < durare, last In durance vile here must I wake and weep.
duplicity (du-plis'i-ti), «. [< ME. duplieite, <
< durus, hanl, lasting : see dure, v.] Having the
Burns, Epistle from Esopus to Maria.
OV. dui'lirite, F. duplicitS
8p. duplicidad = = quality of la.sting, or continuing long in being; 3t. Any material supposed to be of remarkable
Pg. iiu}iliridade =
It. duplicitA, < LL. duplid-
not perishable or changeable; lasting; endur- durability, as buflf-leather
-v^ „<, especially, »
„«.i-.v^^..„..ti ,; coi>cvj.<»jij,
, a anuug
strong
"
-. doubleness, ML. ambiguity, < L. tluplex
ing: as, dura&ie timber; duraote cloth ; durable cloth made to replace and partly Jo imitate
'-), twofold, double: see duplex.] 1. The > -. ..
happiness. buff-leather ; a variety of tammy. Sometimes
ii.!:- of being double doubleness. [Bare.];
The monuments of wit and learning are more durable written durant, and also called ccerlasting.
Thejf neither acknowledge a multitude of unmaile del-
tJea, nor yet that duplieity of them which Plutarch con-
tlian the monuments of power, or of the hantls.
Baciin, Advancement of Learning, I. 101.
Your mincing nlceries — diira7>c« petticoats, and silver
bodkins.
taoded for (one good and tlie other erllX
They might take rp their Crosse, and foUqw the second Marston, Jonton, and Chapman, Eastward Ho, i. 1.
CudmirfA, Intellectual Sjntem, p. SI.
Adam vnto a durable happtnesse. As the taylor that out of seven yards stole one and a
Thete Intermediate examples need not in the least oon- Purehat, Pilgrimage, p. 28. half of durance. H. Wilson, llirce Ladles of London.
fnae oar generally distinct ideas o( the two families of
For time, though in eternity, applied
baildtngs ; the one In which tlie sabstance Is alike through- Is not a buff-jerkin a most sweet robe of durance!
To motion, measures all things duraUe
oat, ana the forma and conditions of the ornament as- Shak., 1 Hen. IV., i.2.
By present, past, and future.
mne or prore that It is so and the other, in which
; . . .
Milton, P. L., V. 581. 4. A kind of apple.
the sabstance is of two kinds, one internal, the other ex-
temal, and the system of decoration is founded on this The rery susceptibility that makes him- quick to feel dlirancyt,n. \_As durance.] Continuance; last-
E: 4»plieUy, as pre-eminently in St. Mark's. I have used makes him also Incapable of deep and durable feeling. ingness durance. ;
K> the word duflicily in no depreciatory sense. Jiutkin. LowiU, Among my Books, 1st ser., p. 364. The souls ever duraney I sung before,
A star in the Northern Crown, . . . (i| Coronie), was = Byn. Permanent, Stable, etc. (see tatting), abiding, con. Ystruck with mighty rage.
loand to have completed more than one entire circuit Uniiiiiu. Ilriri, -strong, tough. Dr. 11. More, Sleep of the Soul, 1. 1.
since Us flrstdtaeoverr: another. T8erpentaril,ha.l closed durableness (du ra-bl-nes), n.
quality of The U
•p l«to apparent singleness : wfille in a thlr.I, i orionis,
dnranritafdii-ran'iit)
being lasting or enduring; durability : as, the "*" *°5*5^ "a ^ ''
«
\
L<.^'"-««!3'0"^
Durnnnn(«P(,Aff
(see def.)\
V^
tie eonrerse change had taken pUce. and deceptive sin- ^'.^ fluo-arsenate of aluminium, iron,
duralleness of honest fame
gleneas had been transformed Into obrloua duplicity.
A. M. Clerke, Astron. In 19th Cent p 58.
....
*» '"• ""^ timber of the walnut-tree, It may lie termed
and sodium, occurring in orange-red monoclinic
crystals, associated with cassiterite (tin-stone),
Uonbleness of.^.
'
_ _. ,, . ,
an English shlttim-wood lor the fineness, smoothness, and
at Durango, Mexico.
8. heart or speech
the acting ; duraUeneu thereof. Fuller, Worthies, Surrey.
or speaking differently in relation to the same The duralJrnen of metals Is the foundation of this ex- duranset, n. An
obsolete form of durance.
thing at different tiroes or to different persons, traordlnary steadiness of price,«. [< It. rfwran^e, a kind of durantt (du'rant),
jrith intention to deceive the practice of de- ;
^'''"" *""'*• ^™'"» «' Nations, i. ii.
L. rfi(ran(<-).v, lasting, ppr. of strong cloth, <;
ption by means of dissimulatiou or double- durably (dii'ra-bli), adv. In a lasting manner; durare, last: see dure, v.] Same as durance, 3.
with long contiDuance. Duranta (du-ran'ta), «. [NL., named after
[And shall we even now, whilst we are yet smarting from An error In physical speculations Is seldom productive Castor Durante, aiti Italian physician (died
'^ consequences of her treachery, become a second time of such coiisequencea, either to one's neighbour or one's 1590).]
! good easy dupes of her du/ilMlyl self, as are deeply, durably, or extensively injurious.
genus of verbenaceous shrubs of A
tropical America, bearing a great profusion of
Anceilotet of Bp. WaUon, I. 273. K. Knox, Essays, 1.
blue flowers in racemes. D. Plumieri is found
jl think the student of their character shonld also Iw slow dnral(dti'ral), a. [< dura (mater) + -ah] Of in greenhouses.
"• P^rtaimiig to the dura mater.
rX!^TZ'iZZ'',^;i'!:it„V!;iTor^^^^^ durante beneplacito (du-ran'te be-ne-plas'i-
! Oppression, in politics and religion. TTie dnral vessels were well injected externally and In- to). [ML. NL. \j. durante, a.h\. of duran(t-)s,
:
llmeells, Venetian Life, xxl. ternally. Medical Sews, Lll. 430. during, ppr. of durare, last, dure (see dure, v.,
In Uitr, the pleading of two or more dis- dura mater (du'rft ma'tSr). [NL. : L. dura, and during); LL. beneplacito, abl. of benepla-
net matters together as if constituting but ^s™- of durus, hafcl; mater, mother: see dure, citum, good pleasure, neut. of beneplacitus, pp.
"e. =8jm. 3. Ouile, deception, hypocrisy, artiOce, chl- mother, and cf. dura.] The outermost membra- of beneplacere, bene placere, please well see 6e- :
nous envelop or external meuinx of the brain neplacit.] During good pleasure.
) ; :
2. A state levee or audience held by the gov- always rendered with almost unparalleled truth, is some- Duria (dii'ri-a), ». See Durio.
ernor-general of India, or by one of the native what profuse and labored, and often sacrifices beauty to durian (du'ri-an), n. [< Malay d«<r!/OTi.] 1. A
princes; an official reception.
exactness l)ut toward the close of his c.ireer he sought
to attain repose and simplicity of manner and subject.
;
tree, the Durio Zibethinus. See Durio. 2. The —
fruit of this tree.
On January 1, 1877, Queen Victoria was proclaimed Era- duress (du'res or dii-res'), n. [< ME. duresse,
press of India, at a darbdr of unequalled magnificence,
duresce, hardship, <; OF. durece, duresce, du- the fruit of
We tasted many fruits new to us; we tried a durt'an, . . .
held on the historic " ridge " overlooking the Mughal capi- the East, and having got over the first
t.-il of Delhi. Encyc. Brit., XII. 811. resse Pr. duressa Sp. Pg. dureza = It. du- = =
liorror of the onion-like odour we found it by no means
. . .
rezza, < L. duritia, hardness, harshness, sever- bad. Lady Brassey, Voyage of Sunbeam, II. xxiv.
duret (dur), o. [Sc. also dour; < OF. dur, F. ity, austerity, < durus, hard: see dure, «.] 1+.
dar = 8p. Pg. It. dura, < L. durus, hard, rough,
Hardness.
durillo (do-rel'yo), n. [Sp., dim. of duro, hard:
harsh, insensible, =
Ir. dur =
Gael, dur, dull, see dure, a.} An old Spanish coin, a gold dol-
hard, stupid, obstinate, firm, strong, W. dir, =
Ye that here an herte of suche duresse,
A faire body formed to the same.
lar: otherwise called the escudillo de oro and
certain, sure, of force, dir, force, certainty; coronilla.
Political Poems, etc. (ed. Furinvall), p. 67.
but the Celtic forms, like W. dur, steel, may duringt, «. [< ME. during; verbal n. of dure,
be borrowed from the Latin.] Hard rough. 2. Hardship;
;
constraint; pressure; imprison- V.} Duration; existence.
What dure and cruell penance dooe
ment restraint of liberty durance. ; ;
And that shrewes ben more unsely if they were of lenger
I sustaine for none offence at all. Whan the spaynols that a-spied spakli thei him folwed, durinff and most unsely yf they weren perdurable.
Palace of Pleasure, I. sig. Q, 4. And deden al the duresse that thei do migt. Chaucer, Boethius, iv. prose 4.
William of Palerne (E. E. T. S.), 1. 3632.
duret (dur), V. [< ME. durer, F.
diireu, < OF. duringt, p. a. [< ME. during, ppr. of duren,
=
Pr. Sp. Pg. durar It. durare, < L. = Yef I delyuer my moder fro this Inge, shall eny other last: see dure, v.} Lasting; continuing; en-
durer do her duresse? Merlin (E. E. T. S.), i. 19.
durare, intr. be hardened, be patient, wait, hold during. Chaucer.
Right feeble through the eviU rate
out, endure, last, tr. harden, inure, < durus, Of food which in her ditresse she had found. Temples and statues, reared in your minds.
hard, rough, harsh, insensible : see dure, a. Spenser, F. Q., IV. viii. 19.
The fairest, and most during imagery.
B. Jonson, Sejanus, i. 2.
Hence endure, perdure, duration, during, etc.] After an unsatisfactory examination and a brief duress,
1. intratis. 1. To extend in time; last; con- the busy ecclesiastic was released. during (diir'ing), prep. duringe, prep.,
[< ME.
tinue ; be or exist ; endure. Motley, Dutch Republic, III. 398. prop. ppr. of dure, last (see during, p. a.), like
Whyl that the world may dure. 3. In law, actual or apprehended physical re-
OF. and F. durant =
Pr. duran, durant Sp. =
Chaucer, Man of Law's Tale, 1. 980. straint so gi'eat as to amount to coercion: a
Pg. It. durante, < L. durante, abl. agreeing with
species of fraud in which compulsion in some the substantive, as in durante vita, during life,
Vpon a sabboth day, when the disciples were come to-
lit. life lasting, where durante is the present
gether vnto the breakyng of the bread, Paule made a ser- form takes the place of deception in accom-
mon duryng to raydnight. Tyndale, Works, p. 476. plishiug the injury. Cooley participle used in agreement with the noun
Duress of goods,
Yet hath he not root in himself, but dureth for a while. the forcible seizing or withholding of personal property vita (E. life), used absolutely: durante, abl. of
Mat. xiii. 21. without sufficient ju.stilicatioii, in order to coerce the claim- ditran(t-)s, ppr. of durare. last: see dure, v.]
ant.— Duress of Imprisonment, actual deprivation of In the time of; in the course of; throughout
The noblest of the Citizens were ordained Priests, which liberty. —
Duress per minas, coercion by threats of de-
function dured with their liues. struction to life or limb. A promise is voidable when made
the continuance of: as, during life; during
Purctias, Pilgrimage, p. 332. our earthly pilgrimage ; during the space of a
under duress, whether this is exercised immediately upon
2. To extend in space. the promisor or upon wife, husband, descendant, or ascen. year.
Arabye durethe fro the endes of the Reme of Caldee dant. Ulysses was a baron of Greece, exceedingly wise, and
unto the laste ende of Affryk, and marchethe to the Lond duresst (dii-res'), v. t. [< duress, n.} To sub- during the siege of Troy invented the game of chess.
of Ydumee, toward the ende of Botron. ject to duress or restraint ; imprison. Quoted in Strutt's Sports and Pastimes, p. 405.
Mandeville, Travels, p. 43.
If the party duressed do make any motion. Bacon, During the whole time Rip and his companion had la-
"How fer is it hens to Camelot?" quod Seigramor. bored on in silence. Irving, Sketch-Book, p. 53.
**
Sir, it is vj mile vnto a plain that duretli wele two myle duressort (du-res'or), n. [< duress + -or.} In
Jlferfm(E. E. T. law, one who subjects another to duress. Bacon.
The whole world sprang to arms. On the head of Fred-
fro thens." S.), ii. 2«0.
eric is all the blood which was shed in a war which raged
II. trans. To abide endure.;
durett (dii-ref), n. [Appar. < OP. duret, F. during many years and in every quarter of the globe.
duret (= It. somewhat stiff, hard, etc.,
duretto), Macaulay, Frederic the Great.
He that can trot a courser, break a rush. dim. of dur, hard, etc., < L. durus, hard:
stiff,
And, arm'd in proof, dare dure a strawes strong push. Durio (dii'ri-6), n. [NL., also written Duria
Marston, Satires, i.
see dure, a.} A
kind of dance. and (non-Latinized) Durion,
+ Last- The Knights take their Ladies to dance with them gal- Dhourra, etc., < Malay dury-
durefult (dur'ful), a. [< dure -ful.}
ing as, dureful brass.
:
liards, durets, corantoes, Ac.
Beaumont, Masque of Inner-Temple.
on: see durian.} genus of A
malvaceous trees, of which
The durefult oake whose sap is not yet dride. durettat, n. [As if < It. duretto, somewhat there are three species, na-
Spenser, Sonnets, vi.
hard: see duret.} A
coarse kind of stuff, so tives of the Malay peninsula
durelesst (diir'les), a. [< dure -less.} +
Not called from its wearing well. and adjoining islands. The
lasting; fading; fleeting: as, "dureless plea- I never durst be seen durian, D. Zibethinus, the best-
sures," Raleigh, Hist. World. Before my father out of duretta and serge known species, is a tall tree very
Diireresque (dU-rfer-esk'), a. [< Diirer (see def.)
But if he catch me
in such paltry stutfs. commonly cultivated for its fruit,
To make me look like one that lets out money, which is very large, with a thick
+ -csque.} In the manner or style of Albert Let him say, Timothy was born a fool. hard rind and entirely covered
Diirer, themost famous Renaissance artist of Jasper Mayne, City Match, i. 5. with strong sharp spines. JJot-
Germany (1471-1528), noted for the perfection withstanding its strong civet otlor
Durga (dor'ga), n. [Hind. Durga, Skt. Durga, and somewhat terebinthinate fla-
of his drawing and the facility with which he
a female divinity (see def.), prop, adj., lit. vor, it is regarded by the natives
delineated character and passion: as, Diirer- whose going is hard, hard to go to or through, as the most delici^s of fruits. The
esque detail. Alljert Diirer was at once painter, sculp- custard-like pulp in which the
impassable, as n. difficulty, danger, < dur- for large seeds are embedded is the
tor, engraver, and architect but his fame is most widely
;
spread through his admirable engravings, both on wood dus-, hard, bad (= Gr. Sva-, bad see dys-), : + Durian (i).,r,v,^.feM.- part eaten; the seeds are also
and on copper, which far surpassed anything that had y/ ga, another form of \/ gam, go, come, E. = nils). roasted and eaten, or pounded into
J: ;
The ancients did burn their firmest stone, and even frag-
MMon, P. R., i. 29«.
[Daniel is the very man who has heard the torment-
He
ments of marble, wiiich in time Iwcame almost marble Dusk faces with white silken turbans wreathed. ed spirits crying out for the second death, who has read
again, at least of indissoluble duriYw, as appeareth in the Milton, P. K, iv. 76. the du»ky characters on the portal within which there is
standing theatres. Sir II. Wollun, Elem. of Architecture. As rich as moths from dusk cocoons. no hope. Macaulay, Milton.
Tennyson, Princess,
2. Hardness of mind; harshness; cruelty.
ii.
Memorial shapes of saint and sage.
Ciickeram. n. n. darkness; an obscuring of
1. Partial That pave with splendor the Past's ditsky aisles.
Lowell, Under the Willows.
durjee (d^r'je), n. [Also written dirgee, durzee, light, especially of the light of day; a state
etc., repr. Hind, darzi, vernacularly darji, < between light and darkness twilight as, the ; : 2. Rather black; dark-colored; fuscous; not
Pers. darsi, a tailor.] In the East Indies, a dusk of the evening the dusk of a dense forest.
; li^ht or bright: as, a dttsky brown; the dusky
native domestic tailor or seamster. He quits wings of some insects.
durmast (der'mftst), n. [Origin tmeertain.] A His door in darkness, nor till dusk returns. I will take some savage woman, she shall rear my dusky
Wordsu^rth, Excursion, v.
species of oak ( Quercus sessiUflora, or, according race. Tennyson, Locksley Hall;
to some, Q. pubescens) so closely allied to the Prone to the lowest vale th' aerial tribes
Descend the tempest-loving raven scarce A smile gleams o'er his dusky brow.
common oak (Q. Sobur) as to be reckoned by :
Dares wing the dubious dusk. Thomson, Summer. Whittier, Mogg Megone, i.
some botanists only a variety of it. lu wood Is, Fortunately the dusk had thrown a veil over us, and in Here were the squalor and the glitter of the Orient —
however, darker, heavier, and more elastic, and leas em the exquisite delicacy of the fading light we drifted slowly the solemn dusky faces that look out on the reader from
to apUt or to break comparatireljr <ea»jr to bend,
; but it Is comparatireljr * the pages of the .\rabiHn Nights.
up the mysterious river.
nndis therefore highly ralued by the builder ana the cabl- C. W. Stoddard, Masballah, p. 161. T. B. Aldrich, I'onkapog to Pesth, p. 201.
net-maker.
dum', dams (dfem, d*mz), n. [E. dial. (Corn- 2. Tendency to darkness of color; swarthiness. 3. Hence, figuratively, gloomy ; sad. [Rare.]
wall) duni, a door-post, gate-post, < Com. dom, Some aprinlded freckles on his face were seen, While he continues in life, this dnxky scene of horrour,
door-post; cf. W. dor, drtcs, door: see door. Whoae dusk set oS the whiteness of the sUn. this melancholy prospect of final perdition will frequent-
Dryden, PaL and Arc., ill. 77. ly occur to his fancy. Bentley, Sermons.
In rMiNinf/,a "sett" of timbersutamine. Dunn
is >• •met itn''-s made singular and aometimes plural. (Pryee.) dusk (dusk), r. [< ME. dusken, earlier donken, Dusky duck. See duck.
i he term chlelly Used at present, eapeclalljr in the United
.^lates, is «•(( (which see).
make dark, become dark < dusk, a.] I. trang. Dussumiera (dus-u-me'rS), n. [NL. (Cuviei
;
1. To make dusky or dark; obscure; make less and Valeneiennesj 1847; also Dussumieria) ;
dum-, f. '. See derifi.
luminous. named for the traveler Dussumier.'i A genus of
duro (dS'ro), n. [Sp.l The Spanish silver dol- fishes, in some systems made type of a family
See After the son la up, that shadow which dusketh the light
lar, the peso dtiro. dollar.
DiLs-itimhridw,
of the moon moat needs be under the earth. Holland.
durometer (du-rom'e-t*r), n. [< L. rfMi-M, hard, fish of the A
and never his dassamierid (dus-u-me'rid), n.
Essex, at all times hit [Raleigh'sl rival,
+ metrum, a measure.] apparatus invent- An friend, saw his own lustre dusked by the eminence oi his f am 1 y 1> «,< ii m icridce. i
e<I by Behrens for testing the hardness of steel Inferior. /. Disraeli, Amen, of Lit., II. 268.
Dossoinieridse (dus-u-me'ri-de), n. pi. [NL.,
e -'i-^ I.
.,„uisu eiaentlally of a small drill fitted with
measuring the aniuont of feed under a given
'.
2. To make dim. < Uwisumiera -idw.'] family of malacop- + A
the drill, and counting the turns of the drill. Which clothes a dlrknesa of a forletyn and a despised terygian fishes, represented by the genus Dus-
work are conalderea to give relatively the
I elde hadde dusked and derked. sumiera. It is closely related to the family Clupeid(r,
I
: the steel. Chaucer, Boethius, i. prose 1. but the abdomen is rounded and the ribs are not connected
duroust lu'ni-i), a. [< L. durus, hard: see The falthfulnes of a wife Is not stained with deceipt, with a median system of scales. The species are few in
(Inf.. a. nor dusked with any dissembling. number; r>ne (Dussumiera lereti) is an inhabitant of the
Sir r. WilsuH, Art of Rhetoric, p. 56. ea.'itcrn cna-st of the I'nited States.
Ill vary much from their primitive ten- Dossamierina (dus''ii-me-ri'na), n. pi. [NL.,
"'! w) become more durou*. n. intrans. 1. To grow dark; begin to lose
Dussumiera + -ina^.] In Giinther's system,
'l'rii..ft- ....
Thel du—hed hym, thel daiahed hym, Time had somewhat sullied the colour of It with such a
Thel Inaabcd hym, thel laaahed bnn. kind of duskiness, aa we may observe in plcturea tlut have animals raised a great dust; to take the dust
The! poaalied hym, thel paaahed nym. bung In some amoky room. of a carriage going in advance.
All aorowe the! saide that It semed hrm. Boetius (trans.), p. 3 (Oxf., 1674).
By reason of the abundance of his horses their dust shall
York Playt, p. 481.
daskish (dus'kish), a. [<dusk+-iahl.'\ Mod- cover thee. Ezek. xxvi. 10.
^K
^b.
MjBoan then
OoeitjnMt the toaiea,
mightely the rooldes did aerche,
the tore wallea &
erately dusky; partially obscure; dark or —
Hence 3. Confusion, obscurity, or entangle-
^t
^K All daurt<( Into the diche, doll to l>e-holde.
DatruMon i,f Troy (Z. E. T. 8.X L 4T76.
blackish.
Sight is not well contented with sudden departmenta
ment of contrary opinions or desires embroil-
ment discord as, to raise a dust about an af-
; :
;
^^H move with violence. [Now only prov. Eng.] Sir U. Walton, Elem. of Architecture. Great contest follows, and much learned dust
^^B Such a daaande drede duxhed to hia herte daskishly (dus'kish-li), adv. Cloudily; darkly; Involves the combatants each claiming truth.
;
—
lUoHC, dark not found in AS., but perhaps a sur- doskishness
;
Crude matter regarded as consisting of sepa-
slight obscurity dimness. ;
vival of the older form of AS. deorc, ME. deorc, rate particles elementary substance.
;
derk, E. dark, which in its rhotacized form has 1°he harts uae dictamtu. The swallow the hearbe cele-
donla. The weaaell fennell seede, for the duskishnesse Many [a day] hade 1 be ded <fe to dust roted,
no obvious connections, while denxc, dosk, dusk and blearlaboeaae of her eyes. Xadde it be Gotldes grace & help of that best.
appears to be related to Norw. dusk, a drizzling Btnttnuto, Paaaengera' Dialogues (1612). WiUiam qf PaUme (E. E. T. 8.), 1. 4124.
;; ;
The bodies of the saints, what part of the earth or sea An engel duste hit a swuch dunt that hit bigon to clat-
eyes —
Running or flying dustman, a man who re-
moved dust from dust-holes, without license, for the sake
soever holds their dwitg, shall not be detained in prison eren. Legend of St. Katherine, 1. 2026. of what he could pick out of it. [Eng.]
when Christ calls for them. . . Not a dust, not a bone,
.
Observe, my English gentleman, that blowes have a won-
can be denied. itep. T. Adams, Works, II. 106. At Marlborough Street one day early in November,
derful] prerogative in the feminine sex ; . . . if , . . she
1837, two of the once celebrated fraternity known as
Hereafter if one Dust of Me be good, to dust her often hath in it a singular . , . ver- "fly-
ing dust-men "were charged with having emptied a dust-
Mix'd with another's Substance be, tue. Benvenuto, Passengers' Dialogues (1612).
hole in Frith Street, without leave or licence of the con-
Twill leaven that whole Lump with love of Thee.
intrans. To run ; leave hastily ; scuttle tractor. Quoted in First Year of a Silken Reign, pp. 78, 79.
Cowley, The Mistress, All over Love. n.
get out: as, to get up and dust; come, dtist out dustoori (dus-to'ri), n. Same as dasturi.
7. A low condition, as if prone on the ground.
He raiseth up the poor out of the dust. 1 Sam. 11. 8.
of here. [Colloq. or slang.^ dus't-pan (dust'pan), TO. utensil for collect- A
"Vrgan lepe vnfain ing and remo-ving dust brushed from the floor,
8. Rubbish; ashes and other refuse. [Eng.] Oner the bregge [bridge] he deste. furniture, etc.
Sir Trintrcm, 9 (Minstrelsy, ed. Scott, \.).
But when the parish dustman came, iii.
dust-pointt (dust'point), TO. An old rural game,
His rubbish to withdraw.
He
found more dust within the heap
dust-ball (dust'bal), TO. disease in horses in A probably the same as push-pin.
Than he contracted for Hood, Tim Turpin.
which a ball is sometimes formed in the intes- We to nine holes fall.
I
tinal canal, owing to over-feeding with the dust At dust-point or at quoits.
A string of carts full of miscellaneous street and house of corn or barley, its presence Drayton, Muse's Elysium,
is indicated by a hag- vi.
rubbish, all called here ILondon] by the general name of
dust. New York Tril/une, Sept. 1879. gard countenance, a distressed eye, a distended belly, and
9,
hurried respiratibn,
Then let him be more manly he looks
; for
Like a great school-boy that had been blown up
9. Gold-dust; hence, money; cash. See phrases dust-bin (dust'bin), TO. covered receptacle A
Last night at dust-point.
—
below. [Slang.] 10. Sauye as dust-brand cos- for the accumulated dust, ashes, and rubbish Beau, and FL, Captain, ill. 3.
mic dust. See cojnnic— Down With the (his, your) of a dwelling, usually placed in a cellar or in a dust-prig (dust 'prig), TO. dust-hole thief; A
dust, pay or deliver the money at once.
yard. [Eng.] one who filched from dust-bins. [Eng.]
The abbot down with his dust ; and, glad he had es-
caped so, returned to Reading, as somewhat lighter in Villages, with their rows of hovels sandwiched in be- The days of "dusting on the sly" seem to be rapidly
purse, so much more merry in heart than when he came tween rows of dustbins. Contemporary Hen., Lll. 128. passing away. The transportation of the renowned Bob
thence. Fuller, Ch. Hist., II. 218. dust-brand (dust'brand), TO. Smut. Also dust. Bonner, first of dust-prigs, added to the great fall in
breeze, have caused this consummation.
Liinb. ni settle two hundred a year upon thee.
Aldo. Before George, son Limberham, you'l spoil all,
dust-brush (dust'bmsh), TO.
. . . brush made of A
Quoted in First Year of a Silken Reign, p. 79.
feathers, fine bristles, tissue-paper, or the like,
if you underbid so. Come, douni with your dust, man
what, show a base mind when a fair Lady's in question for removing dust, as from furniture, walls, dust-prigging (dusfprig^ing), to. Filching or
stealing from dust-bins.
!
Dutch duty
Mnverton began reasoning with the boys, taZHni; Breadstuff dutied so high in the market of Great
fonns after G.) (ML. theodifteug, iheoiiscus, first . . . is
Britain us in times of plenty to exclude it, and this is done
to them tike a Dutch vwle (I wonder what that expression
in the 9th century), German, Teutonic, lit. be- means) about their cruelty. from the desire to favor her own farmers.
longing to the people, popular, national (sup- Helps, Animals and their Masters, p. 131. Ames, Works, II. 13.
posed to have been tirst applied to the 'popular' The Teutonic or Germanic race; dutiful (du'ti-ful), a. [< duty + -/u?.] 1. Per-
II. «. 1.
or national language, German, in distinction the German peoples generally used : as a plu- forming the duties required by social or legal
from the literary and church language, Latin, ral. Specifically —
2. The Low Germans, par- obligations; obedient; submissive to natural
and from the neighboring Romance tongues), ticularly the people of Holland, or the kingdom or legal superiors ; obediently respectful : as, a
being orig. =
Goth, 'thiudisks (in adv. thiudiskv,
of the Netherlands ; the Dutchmen ; the Hol- dutiful son or daughter ; a dutiful ward or ser-
translating Gr. i&viKu^, adv. of cOvmog, national, vant; St dutiful subject.
landers: called specifically the i/OM!l>H<cfe.- used
also foreign, gentile) =
AS. iheddisc, n., a lan-
as a plural. —
3. The High Germans; the in- The Queen being gone, the King said, I confess she hath
guage, < Goth, thiuda =
AS. theod OS. Ihiod, = habitants of Germany; the Germans: formerly been to me the most dut\ful and loving Wife that ever
thioda, theoda =
OFries. thiade OD. diet = = called specifically the High Dutch: used as a
Prince had. Baker, Chronicles, p. 276.
OHG. dioUi, diot, MHG. diet, people, Icel. = plural.
Though never exceptionally dutiful in hia filial rela-
thjodh, nation, =
Lett, tauta, people, nation, = Germany is slandered to have sent none to this war (the
he had a genuine fondness for the author of his
tions,
Lith. tauta, country, =
Ir. tuath, people, Oscan = Crusades] at this first voyage and that other pilgrims,
;
being, J. Hawthorne, Dust, p. 187.
touto, people (cf. meddix tutictis (Livy), the chief passing through that country, were mocked by the Dutch, 2. Expressive of a sense of duty; showing
magistrate of the Campanian towns: meddix, and called fools for their pains. Fuller. compliant respect ; required by duty a.s, duti- :
medix, a magistrate) cf. Skt. ; (a, grow, be V 4t. The Teutonic or Germanic language, in- ful attentions.
strong. This noun (Goth, thiuda, OHG. diot,
etc.) appears in several proper names, as in
cluding all its forms. See 5, 6. 5. The lan- — There would she kiss the ground, and thank the trees,
bless the air, and do dutiful reverence to every thing she
guage spoken in the Netherlands the Holland- ;
thought did accompany her at their first meeting.
AS. Theodric, G. Dietrich, D. Dierrijk, whence E. ish language (which differs very slightlj- from Sir P. Sidney.
Derrick, giving name to the mechanical con- the Flemish, spoken in parts of the adjoining Surely if we have unto those laws that dutiful regard
trivance so called see derrick. The word Dutch
:
kingdom of Belgium) called distinctively Low which their dignity doth require, it will not greatly need
—
:
came into E. directly from the MD., but it is Dutch. 6. The language spoken by the Ger- that we should be exhorted to live in obedience unto them.
also partly due to the G. form.] I. a. 1. Of or Hooker, Eccles. Polity, ilL 9.
mans; German; High German: formerly, and
pertaining to the Teutonic or German race, in- still occasionally (as in the United States, espe- dutifully
(dii'ti-ful-i), adv. In a dutiful man-
cluding the Low German (Low Dutch) and the cially where the two races are mingled), called ner; with regard to duty; obediently; submis-
High German (High Dutch). See U. Specifi-
cally —
2. Of or pertaining to the Low Germans
distinctively High Dutch. —
7t. The common
sively.
I advised him to persevere in dutifully bearing with his
white clover, TriJ'olium repens : an abbreviation
or to their language, particularly to the inhabi- of Dutch cloier. —
8. [?. c] A kind of linen tape.
mother's ill humour. Anecdotes of Bp. If a(«on, I. 367.
tants of Holland; HoUandish; Netherlandish: -Pennsylvania Dutch, a mixed dialect, consisting of dutifulness (du'ti-ful-nes), n. The quality of
formerly called specifically Low Dutch. German intermingled with English, spoken by the de- being dutiful; submission to just authority;
scendants of the original German settlers of Pennsylvania. habitual performance of duty.
Light pretexU drew me sometimea & Dutch love
;
For tuliiK. Tennyton, OardeDer'i Daughter. —To beat the Dutch, to l>e very strange or surprising
excel anything Ijefore known or heard of said of a state- :
At his [the Earl of Essex's] landing, Bryan MacPhelym
The word Dutch in tbia sense came to have in several ment, an occurrence, etc., usually in the form '*That t)eatt welcom'd hira. tendering unto him all manner of Dutiful-
phrasea an opprobrious or humorous application^ perhaps the Dutch.' (Collo<i., northern U. S.) ness and Service. Baker, Chronicles, p. 350.
due in part to the aniioosity engendered by the long and dutch (duch), V. t. [That is, to treat in Dutch Piety or dutyfulnesa to parents was a most popular vir-
severe contest fur the supremacy of the seas waged by Eng- tue among the Romans. Dryden.
lanii and the Netherlands In the seventeenth century. Hee
fashion: in allusion to the fact that quills were
Dutch auction, eourape, defefue. etc. first so prepared in Holland; < Dutch, a.] To duty (dii'ti), n. pi. duties (-tiz).
;
[Early mod.
3. Of or pertaining to the High Germans or clarify and harden by immersing in heated E. also dutie, duetie, dewty, dewtie, < ME. duete,
to their language : formerly called specifically .sand, as goose-quills. duetee, deute, dewtee, etc., < due, dewe, due, +
Hiijh Dutch — Dutch auction, an auction at wlilch the dutchesst, "• An obsolete spelling of duchess.
auctioneer starts with a liigh price, and comes down till Dutchman (duch'man), M.; pi. Dutchmen (-men).
-te, -ty, formed after such words as bewte, beau-
ty, etc.: see due^ and •ty.'] 1. Obligatory ser-
he meets with a bidder; a ni<xk aru-tion. —
Dutch bar- 1. A
member of the Dutch race ; a Hollander: vice ; that which ought to be done that which ;
gain. See6a™iii».— Dutch bricks, .•^eefrn.-*-'.— Dutch one is bound by natural, moral, or legal obliga-
cheeaa. SeeeA«««i.— Dutch clover. .•*eell.,7.— Dutcli in the United States
often locally applied to
collar, a hone-collar. — Dutch concert. See concert.— Germans, and sometimes to S«an(Unavians. tion to do or perform.
Dutch courage, artincial courage ; boldness Inspired by The Dutch man who sold him this Vessel told him with- It doth not stand with the duty which we owe to our
Intoxicating spirits. heavenly Father, that to the ordinances of on/ mother the
al that the Qoveniment did not allow any such dealings
Pull away at the usquebaugh, man, and swallow Dutch with the English, tho they might wink at it. Church we should show ourselves disobedient.
courage, since thine English is oiized away. Dumpier, Voyages, II. 1. 111. Hooker, Eccles. Polity, ill. 9.
Kingttey, Westward Ho, xi. Take care that your expressions be prudent and safe,
2. [/. c] A
wooden block or wedge used to hide
Dutch cousins, intimate frlentls a humorotis jHTversitMi the opening in a badly made joint.—
: consisting with thy other duties.
of 'tennan cousiiu or cvusina gcrman. —
Dutch d6f6nse,
maa, (a) A
Flying Dutch-
a legendary Dutch captain who for some hei-
Jer. Taylor, Works (ed. 1835), I. 664.
a sham defense. In the middle ages fealty to a feudal lord was accounted
nous olTense was condemned to sail the sea, beating against
I am afraid Mr. Jones maintained a kind of Dutch de- head-winds, till the day of judgment. Lisgends dllTer aa a duty, and the assertion of personal freedom a crime.
fence, and treacherously delivered up the garrison without //. Silencer, Social Statics, p, 265.
to the nature of his offense. According to one, a murder
duly weighing bis allegiance to the fair >k>pbia. was committed on board his ship; according to another, 2. The
obligation to do something ; the bind-
Fielding, Tom Jones, ix. 5. the captain swore a profane oath that he would weather ing or obligatory force of that which is morally
Dutch fOlL See/oOl.—Dutcll gle«k, drink: a Jocular the Cape of Good Hope, though it took him till the last
alliiition to the game of gleek as If tippling were the
: day. It Is said that he sometimes hails vessels with the right : as, when duty calls, one must obey.
favorite game of Dutchmen. Saree. request that they will take letters home for him. (/>> The For the parents iniurie was reuenged, and the duefteof
ship commanded by this captain.— HaUT Dutchman, nature performed or satisfied by the childe,
Nor could be partaker of any of the good cheer, except the IwMMieil iTow, Cnrnu comix. (Ixicai, F.ng.] J'uttenhajn, Arte of Eng. Poesle, p. 138.
it were the liquid part of It, which they call DuUh aletk,
where he plaled his cards so well, and vle<l and revled so Dutchman's-breeches (duch'manz-brich'ez), I taught my
wife her duty, made her see
often, that he had scarce an eye to see withaL n. The plant Dicentra Cucullaria : so called What it behoved her see an<l say and do,
Oayton, Notes on Don Quixote, p. 96. from its broadly two-spurred flowers. [U. S.] Feel in her heart and with her tongue d(-clare.
Browning, Ring and Book, I. 227.
Dutch gold. SeeX>u(cAiM(a<.— DntCblaoe, athiekami Dtttchman's-laadantuii (duch'manz-U''da-
not very open lace, like a coarse Valenciennes lace, niwiein num), n. Bullhoof, the flowers of which are O bard, when love and duly clash
the .Setherlands, generally by the peaaaiitH. Dutch leaf.— Tennyson, Princess, IL
See Dutch nwtoJ.— Dateh Uanldtso named because first used in Jamaica as a narcotic. It is asserted that we are so constituted that the notion
maiie by an association of Dutch chemists), a thin, oily li- Dntchman's-pipe (duch'manz-pip), n. The of duty furnishes in itself a natural motive of action of
quid, insoluble In water, having a pleasant, sweetish smell plant a climber with broad
.iristiilochia Sipho, the highest order, and wholly distinct from all the refine*
and taste. It Is a definite compound, ethylene dicblorid nandsome foliage: so called from the shape nients and modlflcatlons of self-interest.
(L'oIIiClj), formed by mixing ethylene or olefiant gas and Lecky, Europ, Morals, I. 189.
chlorln. It also ocean as a by-product In the manufac-
of the flowers. See cut under Aristolochia.
D^ity to one's countrymen and fellow-citizens, which is
ture of chloral.—-Dntch metU, one of the alloys used as [U. S.]
the social instinct guided by reason, is In all healthy com-
a cheap imitation of golil, and sold in the form of leaves, dutchyt, »• An obsolete
spelling of duchy. muidties the one thing sacred and supreme.
called Dutch ieaj or XeaS-ffotd. It is a kind of brass, con-
tainijlg 11 parts of copper to 2 of zinc, and is one of the
dateons (du'to-us), a. [< duty -ous (cf. beau- + W. K. Clifford, Lectures, 11. 69.
most malleable of alloys. It Is cast in thin plates aitd then teous, (. beauty -ous).} +
1. Dutiful; obedient; 3. Due obedience; submission; compliant or
rolle<l, and afterward beaten inti> rer>' thin leaves. It is subservient. [Rare.] obedient service.
used in bookliinding. — Dutch mjrrtle, oven, pink. >k'e As duteous to the vices of thy mistress
the nouns.— Dutch pins, ^.••y./i
Every subject's duty is the king's but every subject's
Dutch roller, rush. Aa badneas would desire. Shak., Lear, Iv. 6.
;
.See the noiiiw. — Dutch school, tlw ii;imf iipj.li.tl to a soulis his own. Shak., lien. V., iv. 1.
If piety
by sailors as " main strength ami stupidity^ "— Ihltcb tile. Mrs. Oaskell, Sylvia's Lovers, xlx.
comes afterwards, it cannot easily be amiss.
See tOc.- Dutch White. See wAi/*. —
Dutch wife, an Jer. Taylor, Rule of Conscience, ill. 6.
6. Any requisite procedure, service, business,
open frame of ratan or cane, used in hot weather in the
butch East Indies and other tropical countries to rest dutiable (du'ti-a-bl), a. [< duty + -able."] Sub- or office ; that which one ought to do ; particu-
the arms and legs upon while In bed. — To talk like a
jeA't to a customs duty as, dutiable goods.
: larly, any stated service or function: as, the
Dutch uncle, to Ulk with great but kindly severity ami
directness, as If with the authority and unsparing frank- dutied (du'tid), a. [< duty + -ed'^.'i Subjected duties of one's station in life ; to go or be on
ness of an uucle from whom one ha* expectaUooa. to duties or customs. [U. S., and rare.] duty; the regiment did duty in Flanders.
— : . — ;;
judicial powers in town affairs. is often accompanied by deformity or caused by dispro- things being equal, it unavoidably result^
Johns Hopkins Univ. Stud., IV. 55. portion of parts. In ancient, medieval, and later times, //. Spencer, Education, p. 247.
dwarfs have been in demand as personal attendants upon
D, V. An abbreviation of the Latin Deo volente, ladies and noblemen and the ancient Romans practised dwarfllng
;
(dwarf 'ling), n. [< du-arf dim. +
God willing. See Deo volente. methods of dwarfing persons artificially. -Ung^.] A
very small dwarf a pygmy. ;
; .—— ;
riA:fi^, Select Work* (ei Arnold), III. 197. elements: as, a dyarfic metal. 2. In Gr.pros.: —
man and alle ye gylde breyeryn and systen scboUyn be There, where seynt Kateryne was boryed, is nouther (a) Comprising two different rhj-thms ormeters:
redl to bere hym to ye chyrcbe, and affyrryn as It uome Cbircbe ne Chapellc, ne other duellynge ilaee, as, a dyadic epiploce. (6) Consisting of peri-
•eyde, and dwiiU yer tylle ye meaae be don, and be beryld. MandemUe, Travels, p. 62. copes, or groups of systems each of which con-
JSngluk OibU (E. E. T. 8.X p. 88.
The Church of Christ hath been hereby made, not " a tams two unlike systems as, a dyadic poem. :
Oo, and let den of thieves," but in a manner the very dwelling-place Dyadic arithmetic. Siune as binarii arithmetic (which
The old men of the city, ere they die. of foul spirit*. Hooker, Eccle*. Polity, vii. 24. sec, under iiiiian/). — Dyadic dlsyntheme, any combina-
Kiss thee, the matrons dveU about thy ntck. tion of dyads, witli or wittiout repetition, in which each
This wretehed Inn, where we scarce (tay to bait.
B. Jomm, Catiline, T. 8.
We call our Dwelling-plaee, element occurs twice and no ottener.— Dyadic syn-
8. To abide as a permanent resident; reside; Cowley, Pindaric Odes, xli. 1. tbeme, a similar combination in which each element oc-
curs only once.
have abode or habitation permanently or for dwelt (dwelt). Preterit and past participle of
Also dyad, duadic.
aome time. dwell. n. 1. In»iafft.,asumof dyads. See dyad.
H.
In that Desert dtuUyn manye of Arrabyenes.
MandemUe, Traveli, p. 63.
dwindle (dwin'dl), v. i. pret. ;
The promise of the Father, wh*i uliall dieelt d'Wine (dwin), v. i.; pret. and pp. dwined, ppr.
His Spirit within them. MMon, P. L., xiL 487. dunning. [E. dial, and Sc., < ME. dwinen, < Also spelled diaster.
: ;
And creeping shrubs of thousand dyea In some uses, as dying hour, dying bed, etc. (def s. dynametric, dynametrical (di-na-met'rik, -ri-
Waved in the west winds summer sighs. 4, 5), the word is the verbal noun used attribu-
kal), a. [< dynameter + -ic, -ical."} Pertaining
Scott, L. of the L., i. 11. to a dynameter.
tively.] 1 Physically decaying failing from
. ;
dye^t, V. i. An obsolete spelling of die^. life approaching death or dissolution ; mori- dynamic
;
(di-nam'ik), a. and n. [< Gr. SvvafUKd^,
dye^t, »• An obsolete spelling of die^. bund: as, a dying man; a dying tree. powerful, efficacious, < diva/xi^, power: see dy-
You shall no more deal with the hollow dye nam.] I. a. 1. Pertaining to mechanical forces
Or the frail card. B. Jonson, Alchemist, 11. 1.
The noise of battle hurtled in the air,
. . and di/i?i5r men did groan.
. Shak., J. C.,ii.2.
not in equilibrium: opposed to sfndc. 2. Per- —
dye-bath (di'bath), n. bath prepared for use 2. Mortal; destined to death; perishable: as, taining to mechanical forces, whether in equi-
A
in dyeing; a solution of coloring matter in dying bodies. librium or not ; involving the consideration of
which substances to be colored are immersed. I preached as never siu-e to preach again,
forces. By extension 3. Causal; effective; —
motive ; involving motion or change : often
Oxalic acid, like acetic acid, is used for preparing dye- And as a dying man to dying men.
baths. C. T. Davis, Leather, p. 708. Baxter, Love breathing Thanks and Praise. used vaguely.
The direct action of
dye-beck (di'bek), n. Same as dye-bath. 3. Drawing to a close; fading away; failing; erful on the language nature as a dynamic agent is pow-
of savages, but gradually becomes
The dye-beck consists of alizarin and tannin. languishing as, the dying year a dying light. insensible as civilization advances.
: ;
There were clothes there which were to receive diflferent And let my dying words be better with you is the concept of dynamic relation. —Dynamic electri-
colors. All these Jesus threw into one dye-pot, and . . .
Than my dull living actions. city, current electricity. See etectncit!/. — Dynamic
taking them out, each [piece] was dyed as the dyer wished. Beau, and Ft., Philaster, v. S. —
equivalent of heat. See equivalent. Dynamic geol-
Stowe, Origin of the Books of the Bible, p. 222. ogy, that branch of the science of geology wliich has as
5. Pertaining to or associated with death as, : its object the study of the nature and mode of action of
dyer (di'6r), n. [< ME. dyere, diere, deyer, <
a dying hour a dying bed. ;
the agencies by which geological changes are and have
dyen, etc., dye : see dye^, v.'] One whose oc- been ellected. See geology.— TyyuamiC he&d. See head.
He served his country as knight of the shire to his dy- — Dynamic murmurs, cardiac murmurs not caused by
cupation is to dye cloth, sMns, feathers, etc. ing day. Steele, Spectator, No. 109. valvular incompetence or stenosis, but by anemia or an
Almost . my nature is subdued
. .
Dying declaration. See declaration. unusual configuration of the internal surface of the heart,
To what it works in, like the dyer's hand. as where a chorda tendinea is so placed as to give rise to
Shak., Sonnets, cxi.
dyingly (di'ing-li), adc In a dying or languish-
a murmur.— Dynamic relations, causal relations espe-
ing manner. ;
Dyers' spirit, tin tetrachlorid, known in commerce as cially, the relations between substance and accident, be-
oxymuriate of tin (.SnCli -!- 5H2O). It is a valuable mor- dyingness (di'ing-nes), of dying; n. The state tween cause and effect, and between interacting subjects.
dant. hence, a state simulating the approach of death, — Dynamic synthesis, in the Kantian philos., a synthe-
dyer's-broom (di'^rz-brom), n. The plant Ge- real or affected affected languor or f aintness
;
sis of heterogeneous elements necessarily belonging to-
gether.
nista tinctoria, nsed to make a green dye. Also languishment.
called dyeweed. When the pure concepts of the understanding are ap-
Tenderness becomes me best, a sort of dyingness; you plied to every possible experience, their synthesis is either
dyer's-greenweed (di'ferz-gren''wed), n. Same see that picture. Foible —
a swimmingness in the eyes. mathematical or dynamical, for it is directed partly to the
as dyers-broom. Congreve, Way of the World, ilL 5. intuition only, partly to the existence of the phenomenon.
dyer B-moss (di'Srz-mds), n. The lichen Roc- dyke, ». and v. less proper spelling of dike. A Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, tr. by Max Muller.
cella tinctoria. Same as archil, 2. dykenopper (dik'hop"6r), «. The wheatear, Dynamic theory, a theory by which Kant endeavored
dyer's-weed (di'6rz-wed), n. The woad, weld, or Saxicola oenanthe. Swainson. [Local, Eng. (Stir- to explain the nature of matter or the mode of its forma-
tion. According to this theory, all niatterwas originated
yellow-weod, Reseda lutcola, affording a yellow ling).] by two antagonistic and mutually counteracting princi-
dye, and cultivated in Europe on that account. dynactinometer (di-nak-ti-nom'e-t6r), n. [< ples called attraction and repuhiim. all the predicates of
dyester (di'stfer), «. [< dye^ + -ster.'] A
dyer. Gr. <5iiv(a/iif), power, d/cr/f (oktiv-), a ray, + + —
which are referred to motion. Dynamic theory of na-
[Scotch.] /lirpov, ameasure.] An instrument for measur- ture, (a) A theory which seeks to explain nature from
forces, especially from forces of expansion and contrac-
dyestone (di'ston), n. A
red ferruginouH lime- ing the intensity of actinic power, or for com- tion (as the Stoics did), opposed to a mechanical theory
stone occurring in Tennessee, used occasionally paring the quickness of lenses. which starts with matter only, (b) The doctrine that some
: ;
The hope of science at the present day is to express all resorts to or advocates the use of dynamite
pheuomeua in symliols of Dynamics. and the indiscriminate destruction of life and
G. II Leices, Proba. of Life and Mind, IL 283.
.
property for the purpose of coercing a govern-
2. The moving moral or physical forces of any ment or a party by terror.
kind, or the laws which relate to them. Dalance-dynamometer (elevation).
Surely no plea of Justiflcation could absolve the dyna-
The empirical lava of society are of two kinds ; some miter from the eternal consequences of his own Infernal
are uniformities of coexistence, aome of succession. Ac- .AT. A. Rev., CXL. 387.
shorterarm while a weight is balanced on the longer grad-
deeds. uated arm. The most common form of spring-dynamom-
cording as the science is occupied in ascertaining and
The recent explosions on the underground railwsys eter consists of an elliptical spring that may be compressed
verifying the former sort of uniformities or the latter,
.M. Comta gives it the title of Social SUtics or of Social
were the work of . . . dynamiters. or pulled apart in the direction of its longer axis, with an
Dynamiet. J. S. Miil, Logic, VL x. | S.
The American, VII. 93. index and scale, and some-
Dynamiters subventloned by Parisian fanatics were to times a recording pencil, to
These are then appropriately followed by the dynamics indicate the amount of force
of the subject, or the institution In action In many grave appear In Mets. Nineteenth Century, XXII. 421.
exerted. In the apparatus
controversies and many acute crises of history. depending on friction a brake
Atlantic Monthly, LVIII. 418. dynamitical (di-na-mit'i-kal), a. [< dynamite
Dynamics of music, the science of the variation and + -ita/.] Having to do with dynamite; vio- is applied to the face of a pul-
ley, and the force is mea-
contrast of force ur loudness In musical sounds. Qeo- — lently explosive or destructive. sured by the resistance of the
logical dsmamics, that branch of geology which treats Like certain dynamiticaf critics, he is satisfied with de- brake to the motion of the
of the nature and mode of opermtlon of all kinds of physi- stmctlon, and his attitude towards constitutional for- pulley. In other forms fast
cal agents or forces that have at any time, and In any man- mulie Is not unlike that of the dynamitical critic towards and loose pulleys are placed
ner, affertcd the sortace and Interior of the earth.— Blgld Constitutions —
British and other. Sature, XXXI V. 25. side by side and connected by
dynamics, the dynamics of rigid bodies, in which only weighted levers, a certain
ordinary differential equations occur, dynamitically (di-na-mit'i-kal-i), adv. By amount of force being re-
dynamism (di'na-mizm), n. [< Gr, ii-vafuc, means, or as by means, of dynamite; with ex- quired to lift the lever and
power (see dytiam), -urn.'] +
1. The doctrine plosive violence. communicate motion to both
pulleys. In still other forms
that besides matter some other material prin- The Irish attempts, at New York, Paris, and elsewhere, coiled springs are used to test
ciple —
a force in some sense —
is required to dynamitically to blow up England on Iwhalf of Ireland.
The Congregationalist, Feb. 17, 1887.
a direct strain, as in moving a
explain the phenomena of nature. The term Is load or in towing. There are
applied— (a) to the doctrines of some of the Ionic philos- other forms used to test the
dynamiting (di'na-mi-ting), n. [Verbal n. of recoil of guns and the explo-
ophers, who held to aome such principles as love and hate
to explain the origin of motion (6) to the doctrine adopted dynamite, v."] The practice of destroying or sive force of gunpowder. In
;
by Leibnitz that substance consists in the capacity for ac- terrorizing by means of dynamite. the Batchelder dynamometer
tion; (e) to the doctrine of Talt that mechanical energy is Balaace-dynamometer (plan). two pairs of bevel-wheels are
The question is, whether the law permits dynamiting, interposed between the re-
substance ; and (d) to the widely current doctrine that the or whether It will slop dynamiting at the place where It
universe contains nothing, not expllcsble by means of the ceiving and the transmitting pulleys, one pair in line with
Is started, which is the only place where it can be stopped.
doctrine of energy. the pulleys, the other pair at right angles to them and in
Pop. Sci. Mo., XXVIII. 426.
2. The mode of being of mechanical force or line with a balanced scale-beam. The force and resistance
dynamitism (Ji'na-ml-tizm), «. [< dynamite transmitted through the gears tend to turn the scale-beam
energy. about the line of the pulley-shafts, and this must be re-
Who does not see the contradiction of requiring a sub- + -i.im ] The use of dynamite and similar ex-
.
sisted by a weight upon the scale-beam, which is the mea-
stance for that which by Its definition is not substantial plosives in the indiscriminate destruction of sure of the force transmitted. The dynamometer is not a
at all, but pure dynamum ? life and property for purposes of coercion direct indicator of power exerted or of work performed;
(i. U. Urns, Probs. of Life and Mind, L IL I 2. bat when the velocity with which resistance is overcome
any political theory or scheme involving the
Dynamism would be more appropriate than Materialism or force transmitted has been determined by other means,
use of such destructives. this velocity, and the measure of the force obtained by the
as a designation of the modem scientific movement, tlie
ideaof inertia having given place to that of an eiinillbrium Uniiuallfled repudiation of assassination and dynamit- dynamometer, are the data for computing the power or
of forces. J. M. Rigg, Mind, XII. 657. ism. The American, VL 36. work. See balance-dynammnetcr, crushrr-yane, piezometer,
and pr«»»wre-»7o<?«.— Dynamometer coupling, a device
dynamist (di'na-mist), fl. [As dynam-ism + dynamization (di'na-mi-za'shon), n. [< dyna- Inserted In a shaft by means of which the jjower transmit
-int.} A believer in dynamism. mi:e + -ation.'] 1. Cynamio development; in- ted may be nu-aaurcu.
Thus I admit, with the pure dynamist, that the material crease of power in anything dynamogeny as, dynamometric, dynamometrical
; : (di'na-mi.-
nniveriv, or successive material universes, as manifesta.
tions of matter and motion, are concatenated with time,
dynamization of nerve-force. 2. In homeopa- — met'rik, -ri-kal), a, [< dynamometer -ic, +
thy, the extreme trituration of medicines with a -ical.] Pertaining to or made with the aid of a
are lH.,rn. run their course, and fade away, as do the clouds
of air. Pop. Sci. Mo., XXII. 80a. view to increase their efficiency or strength. dynamometer.
dynamistic (dl-na-mis'tik), a. Pertaining to dynamize
(di'na-miz), v. t. ; j)ret. and pp. dyna- dynamometry (di-na-mom'e-tri), n. [< dyna.
I
114
:
d3niastidan (di-nas'ti-dan), m. [< Dynastidw dysarthric (dis-ar'thrik), a. [< dysarthria +dissenterico, < Tu.dysentericus, < Gr. dvcevrtpiKo^
Of or pertaining to dysarthria. KSvaEVTepiajdyBentery: Bee dysentery.] 1. Per
+ -an.] One of the Dynastidw. -ic]
taiuing to, of the nature of, accompanied by
dynasty (di'nas-ti), n. ; yX. dynasties {-tiz). [= Dysaster (dis-as'ter), n. [NL., < Gr. iva-, bad,
= Dan. Sw. dynasti, < F. dynastie + daTTjp =
E. star.] A
genus of fossil petalosti- or resulting from dysentery: as, dysmiterii
f>. G. dynastie
= Sp. dinastla = Pg. dynastia =
It. dinastia, <
chous sea-urchins, of the family Cassidulidw or symptoms or effects. 2. Suffering from dys —
ML. dynastia, dinastia, < Gr. dwaarda, lordship, Collyritidw, or giving name to a family Dysas- entery: as, a dysenteric patient.
rule, < dmaoTtj^, a lord, master, ruler see dy- terida;. dysenterious (dis-en-te'ri-us), o. [< dysenteri
nast.] If. A
:
—
government a sovereignty. 2. Dysasteridse (dis-as-ter'i-de), n. pi. [NL., <
;
+ -ous.] Same as dysenteric. [Rare.]
A race or succession of sovereigns of the same Dysaster -idw.] + A
family of irregular or exo- All will be but as delicate meats dressed for a dysente
cyclio sea-urchins, typified by the genus Dysas- rious person, that can relish nothing. Gataker
line or family governing a particular country
ter, with ovoid or cordate shell, showing bivi- dysentery (dis'en-ter-i), n. [Formerly dysen
as, the soccessive dynasties of Egypt or of
France. um
and trivium converging to separate apices, terie; < P. dysenteric, dyssenterie =
Sp. disen
At some time or other, to be sure, all the beginners of
non-petaloid ambulacra, and eccentric mouth. teria =Pg. dysentcria =
It. disenteria, dissen
dynasties were chosen by those who called them tu govern. dyscnezia (dis-ke'zi-a), n. [NL., < Gr. tFw-, teria =D. dyssenterie =
G. dysenteric Dan =
Burke, Rev. in France. hard, +
;);£?£«', defecate.] In pathol., difficulty Sw. dysenteri, < L. dysenteria, < Gr. dvacvrepia
It is to Manetho that we are indebted for that classifi- and pain in defecation. dysentery, < dvacprcpo^, suffering in the bowels
cation called by the Greeks Dynastic, a word applied gen- dyscnroia, dyschroa (dis-kroi'a, dis'kro-a), n. < (Stiff-, bad, ill, -1- ivTtpov, pi. evrtpa, the bow
those kings which belonged to one family, +
erally to sets of
or who were derived from one original stock. These Dy-
[NL., < Gr. ova-, bad, xpoid, Attic also xP^t els: see entero-.] A disease characterized bj
nasties were named as well as numbered, and their names color.] In pathol., discoloration of the skin inflammation of the mucous membrane of th(
were derived from the town, or region, whence the found- from disease. large intestine, mucous, bloody, and difficuli
er came or where he lived. dyschromatopsia (dis-kro-ma-top'si-ii), n. evacuations, and more or less fever.
H. S. Osborn, Ancient Egypt, p. 49.
[NL., < Gr. dva-, bad, +
;t;pu/ia(f-), color, -f ific, dysepulotic (dis-ep-u-lot'ik), a. [< Gr. iva-
dyne (din), n. [Abbr. of dynam, < Gr. 6ovafii(, view, sight.] In pathol., feeble or perverted hard, +
epulotic, q. v.] In surg., not heaUnj
power see dynam. ] In physics, the unit of force color-sense. Also dyschromatopsy, dischroma-
: or cicatrizing readily or easily: as, a dysepw
in the centimeter-gram-second system, being topsis, lotic wound.
that force which, acting on a gram for one sec- dysclasite (dis'kla-sit), n. [< Gr. dva-, hard, -t- dysesthesia, dysesthetic. See dyswsthesia.
ond, generates a velocity of a centimeter per KAdcKf, a breaking (< K^dv, break), -t- -ite^.] In dysastlictic
second; the product of a gram into a centi- mineral., a mineral, usually fibrous, of a white dysgenesic (dis-jf-nes'ik), a. [< dysgenesis +
meter, divided by the square of a mean solar or yellowish color and somewhat pearly luster, -ic] Breeding with difficulty; sterile; infe-
second. The force of a dyne is about equivalent to the consisting chiefly of hydrous silicate of lime. cund; baiTen. Darwin.
weight of a milligram. It requires a force of about 445,000 Also called okenite.
dynes to suppfjrt one pound of matter on the earth's sur-
dysgenesis (dis-jen'e-sis), n. [NL., < Gr. dva-,
face in latitude 45°. dyscophid (dis'ko-fid), n. A
toad-like amphib- hard, -I- ycvcaic, generation.] Difficulty in
The dyne is about 1.02 times the weight of amilligramme ian of the family Dyscophidai. breeding; difficult generation; sterility; in-
at any part of the earth's surface and the megadyne is Dyscophidae (dis-kof'i-de), n. pi.
; [NL., < Dys- fecundity.
about 1.02 times the weight of a kilogramme. cophus -id<B.] + A
family of firmistemial sa- Dysidea (di-sid'e-a), n. [NL., < Gr. dva-, hard,
J, D. Everett, Units and Phya. Const., p. 167. lient anurous amphibians, typified by the ge- bad, -I- WtOj form: see idea.] genus oi A
dyocsetriacontahedron, dyokaitriakontahe- nus IM/scophus, with teeth in the upper jaw, di- sponges, typical of the family Dysideidw. Also
dron (di'o-se-, di''''o-ki-tri-a-kon-ta-he'dron), n. lated sacral diapophyses, precoracoids resting Duseidcia.
; ;;
;
(le(( + -i'l<r.] A family of fibrous sponges. generation repetition of forms with adaptive of the gastric juice, or diminished or excessive acidity in
;
that secretion, or an Irritability of the stomach-walls or
dysidrosis (dis-i-dro'sis), n. [NL., < Gr. Sva-, modification or functional specialization; a an impairment of their motor functions, and which ap-
hard, + i(Sp<Jf, sweat, perspiration, < Mof (-v/ 'orS) kind of merogenesis opposed to eumerogenesis. pears to depend on some defect in the innervation of the
= E. sweat.'] A
disease of the sweat-follicles, The tendency to bud formation has all along acted stomach, and not on some grosser lesion.
. . .
in which they become distended with the re- concurrently with a powerful synthetic tendency, so that dyspepsy (dis-pep'si), n. Same as dyspepsia.
tained secretion. new units have from the first made but a gradual and dis- dyspeptic (dis-pep'tik), a. and n. [= P. dys-
guised appearance. This is dysmerogenesis, and such ag-
dysis (di'sis), H. [ML., also disis, < Gr. iiaic, gregates as exhibit it may be called dysmeristic. pcptiquc, < Gr. as if *dva7TC7rTiK6(, < dvcT^tipia,
setting of the sun or stars {diaic rj'/Aov, the west), Encyc. Brit., XII. 565. dyspepsia: see dyspepsia.] I. a. 1. Pertaining
< ivetv, sink, dive, set.] In astrol., the seventh to or of the nature of dyspepsia: as, a dyspeptic
dysmerogenetic (dis'me-ro-jf-net'ik), a. [<
house of the heavens, which relates to love, dysnieroiiousis, after genetic.] Produced by or complaint. 2. Suffering from or afflicted with
'
—
liti^tion, etc. resulting fi'om dysmerogenesis; characterized
dyspepsia or indigestion as, a dyspeptic person. :
dys&inesia (dis-M-ne'si-a), «. [NL., < Gr. by or exhibiting dysmerism ; dysmeristic op- —3. Characteristic of one afflicted with chron-
oi-cKivr/ata, < (5vf-, hard, + idvTjai^, movement, <
:
ic dyspepsia; hence, bilious morbid; "blue";
posed to eutnerogenetie. ;
Kiveh; move.] In pathoL, impaired power of pessimistic; misanthropic: as, a dyspeptic vie^v
(U^smeromorph (dis'me-ro-m6rf ), Ji. [< Gr. iva-, or opinion.
voluntary movement. bad, + /if/x)f, part (see dysmerism), + /iopiji//,
dyslalia (dis-la'li-S), «. [NL., < Gr. iva-, hard, shape.] An organic form resulting from dys- II. n. person afflicted with dyspepsia. A
+ '/jt/jiv, speak.] "ia pathol., difficulty of utter- merogenesis; a dysmeristic organism : opposed dy8pepticar(dis-pep'ti-kal), a. [< dyspeptic +
ance dependent on malformation or imperfect to eumeromorph. -al?] Troubled with dyspepsia hence, inclined ;
innervation of the tongue and other organs of to morbid or pessimistic views of things.
Synthesized eumeromorph simulates normal dymiero.
articulation slow or difficult speech.
;
morph ; analysized dysineroiuorph simulates normal eu- How seldom will the outward capability fit the inward
dyslexia (dis-lek'si-a), H. [NL., < Gr. (Jwj-,hard, meromorph. Bneyc. Brit., XII. 656. though talented wonderfully enough, we are poor, un-
+ /i.;(f a speaking, speech, word : see Jexicon.] dysmeromorphic (dis''me-ro-m6r'fik), a.
,
friended, dyspeptical, bashful nay, what is worse than ;
riety of gahnite, or zinc-spinel, from Sussex dysopia (dis-o'pi-a), n. [NL., < Gr. Svaumia, noeal.
county. New Jersey, containing a small per- confusion of face (taken in the def. in another dysporomorph (dis'po-ro-m6rf), n. One of the
centage of manganese so nameS because diffi-
:
sense), < dva-, bad, ill, + ii^ (ut-), eye, face.] l)ijspi)nn)iiirpha'.
Of. pertaining to, or connected with dysmen- ing appetite. cesses. The division includes the pelicans, gannets, cor-
dysorexy (dis'o-rek-si), n. Same as dysorexia. morants, frigates, dartei-s, and tropic-birds.
orrhea as, the dysmennrrheal membrane which
:
is sometimes discharged from the uterus. dyspareimia (dis-pa-r6'ni-S), n. [NL., < Gr. dysporomorphic (dis'po-ro-mfir'fik), a. [<
dysmerism (dis'me-rizm), n. [< Gr. dva-, bad,
Jiw-, hard, + napevvo^, lying beside, < jrapi, be- hysporomorphtv +
-ic] Belonging to or re-
+ part (division), -^ -ism.] An aggre-
niiKtr, side, + eirv^, bed.] In pathol., inability to per- sembling the Dysporomorpha: ; totipalmate;
gation of unlike parts; a process or result of form the sexual act without pain usually ap- : steganopodous.
dysmerogenesis ; a kind or merism opposed to plied to females. Dysporus (dis'p6-rus), n. [NL. (lUiger, 1811:
euTnerism. ^spepsia (dis-pep'sia), n. [Also dyspepsy; =
so called with reference to the closure or oblit-
dysmerlstic (dis-rae-ris'tik), a. [As dysmer- F. dijs]tepsie = 8p. It. ilispepsia =
Pg. dyspepsia, eration of the nostrils), < Gr. dvavopo^, hard to
ism + -ist-ic] Having the character or quality < L. dyspepsia, < Gr. dvaT7£-\j>ia, indigestion, idia- pass, difficult, < dva-, hard, irApo^, passage.] +
of dysmerism; irregularly repeated in a set nr-rof, lianl to digest, < dva-, hard, irc-rdg,+ A genus of gannets: same as Sula. it is often
separated from Sula to designate the brown gannets, as
1 . The fifth letterand sec- lower line and upper space (3). (/) A note on etalizing prefix, -t- /iirj7c, who, which (see i- and
ond vowel in our alphabet. such a degree, indicating such a key or tone (4). which); and with (3) ME. ewilc, < AS. wghwilc
has the same place in the orderIt —
5. As an abbreviation: (a) East: as, E. by (= OHG. eogihwelih), each, orig. "d-ge-hicilc, <
of the alphabet as the correspond-
ing ^ign or character in the older al-
S., east by south. See S. E., E. S. E., etc. (6) a, ever, +
gehwilc, each, any one, as above. See
phabets, Latin and Greek and Phe- In various phrase-abbreviations. See e. </., i. e., every, where -y stands for an orig. each, and
iiician, from which ours is derived E. and O. E., etc E dur, the key of E major.— such and tchich, where -ch is of like origin with
(see A); but the value originally E moll, the key of E minor. -ch in each.'] I. distributive adj. Being either
attached to the sign has undergone e-^^. A
prefi.\ of Anglo-Saxon origin, one of the
much modiUcation. The compar- forms of the original prefix gc-. or any unit of a numerical aggregate consist-
It remains ing of two or more, indefinitely used in pred-
ative scheme of forms (like that given for the preceaing :
i
followed by a single consonant l)eforo final silent e l>eing them was of a different size (that is, from all the
1 has. in the history of the changes of pro- regularly " long," as in rate, write, rode, tube, etc., words
generally pasMl over Into wliat was origl- distinguished thus from forms with a "short " vowel, rat, others, or from every one else in the number).
)'-8ound, that we now call thii sound long e
.
xtrit, rod, tub, etc. In words of recent intnxluction -e is Than the! closed hem to-geder straite eche to other.
/«, n*«a^ etc.). The proper e-sound(iu inet,
'
used whenever this distinction is to be made. In some Merlin (E. E. T. S.), iii. 398.
tically a medium between the completely cases the vowel preceding -e is short, as in ffiiv, lire, bade,
''^r and thd close sound i of pique.
And there appeared . . . cloven tongues like as of fire,
In its hare, Jaeeitn, vineyard, etc., especially in polysyllables in
and it sat upon each of them. Acts ii. 3.
-On«f,fVv) it constitutes about Ave per cent. -i7«, 'ine, -ite, etc., as hostile, jjlyceritu, oj^Msite, etc. ; but
-ranee. Taidng into account also the numer-
'
some of these words were fonnerly or are now often spell- You found his mote the king your mote did see
; ;
ou-> 'luruplis.as ea, re, ei,et/, tv,ie, o*, in which it is found, ed without the snperfiuous e, as bad, (jlyeerin, fibrin, de- But I a beam do fin*l in each of three.
and iu frequent occurrence as a silent letter, e is the most ijotrit, etc. Etyniologicilly, final e in modem English has Shak., L. L. L., iv. 3.
usetl of our alphatwtic signs. This freiiucncy is due in no weight or value, it l>eing a mere chance whether it rep- Wandering each his several way. Milton, P. L., ii. 523.
considerable measure to the general reduction of the vow- resents an original vowel or syllable. Each is strong, relying on his own, and each is betrayed
els of endings to e that coiistltutet a conspicuous part of
[P. -^, fem. -^, pp. suffix, < L. -dtus, -dta when he seeks in himself the courage of others.
the change from Anglo-Saxon to English. The total loss -i.
tli'M fnrTtt' r, of many of endings in
these has
utterance see -«fcl.] A
French sulHx, the termination Emerson, Courage.
1> ft I MM-
IS cases of silent final e, to which ottiers have
r I
of perfect i)articiple8, and of adjectives and 2t. Both.
t>*-e:i Uy analogy with these. A degree of value in
all I
nouns thence derived, some of which are used, .\nd each, though enemies to either's reign,
the economy of our written speech t>elongs to ft, In so far Do in consent shake hands to torture me.
as its occurrence after a single cons^ntant now almost regu-
though consciously as French words, in Eng- 5Aaib. Sonnets, xxviii. ,
larly indicates the long sound of the vowel preceding that lish, as protegi, nigligi, retroussf, digage, iearte, joined end to end.
At eacht, joined each to another ;
coQSonant, as in msl«, m«(e, mite, mo'e, ntute ; but In many etc. Tne Anglicized fonn is -«el (which see). Ten mastsat each make not the altitude
cases it appears also after a single consonant preceded by ea,
a short vowel, and such cases, MBffiotf, lie^., have, vineitara,
A common
English digraph, introduced about Which thou hast perpendiculaiiy fell.
constitute one of the classes where reform in orthography
the beginning of the sixteenth century, hav- .SAoi:., Lear, iv. e.
is most easily made, and has most to recommend it. (See ing then the sound of a, and serving to distin- Each Other. («t) Each alternate; every other; every
-e.) E has further come to be used as an orthographic g^sh e or ee with that sound from e or ee with second.
auxiliary. In some cases after e and ^, where it is conven-
the sound of e. The original sound i reniain«l in Each other worde I was a knave.
tionally regarded as preserving the scMslIed "soft" sound
most of the words having ea until the eighteenth century, Up. .Still, Gammer Onrton's Needle.
of those tetters, as In peoesowe, manof^eabU.
2. As a numeral, 250. I)u Canqe. —
and still prevails in brvak, great, yea, and in a dialectal
3, As a (" Irish ") pronunciation otbeast, please, mean, etc. (which
Living and dying each other day.
Holland, tr. of Pliny, p. 2.
symbol : {a) In the calendar, the fifth of the do- in dialect-writing are spelled so as to represent this pro. (b)Each the other ; one another now generally used :
minical letters. (6) In lo<fic, the sign of the nunciation see baste*) it haa become 6 hi breads dread,
:
•
,
when two i>erson8 or things are concerned, but also nsed
head, meadow, health, tceaith, leather, weather, etc., and, more loi)Scly like one anot/ter (which see, under another)
universal negative proposition. See -4l, 2 {b). nKMlifted by the following r, itxbear^, bear^, heart, hearth,
:
sharp, having the signature (2); also, the final each (ech), a. and pron. [< (1) ME. ech, eche,
dubious.] A genus of large, handsome bomby-
(pche, iche, yche, uche, etc., these being prop,
licli),
Sle, eilc. He,
AS. a-lc (=
ilk. ylc, ulr (> Sc.
MI), icghclick,
tone of the scale, called »«» ; hence so named indef., + gelic, like, (gc-, a generalizing prefix,
liy French musicians, (e) On the keyboard of + body, form': see nyl (= o^), i- (= e-l
lif, =
tlio pianoforte, the white key to the rij^ht of ?/-), and li'ke^, like^, -ly^. Mixed in ME. with
every eroup of two black keys, (il) The tone (2) ilc, ilk (mod. 8c. ilk'^, ilka, q. v.), assibi-
(?ivpn by such a key, or a tone in unison with lated ilche, ich, uch, uich, contr. of earlier iwilc
such a tone. (<•) The deforce of a staff assigned uwilc, itvilch, < AS. gehwilc, gchwylc (= OHG.
to such a key or tone ; with the treble clef, the gahvelih), each, every one, any one, < ge-, gen- MsHtot Hades im/ert-Jis, alx>ulonc half natural size.
1813
; ; ! ! ; ;
ica, having short hind wings, short proboscis, coming." Carlyle. or more in length,
simple anSnniB in the female, and the antennae A mighty eygre raised his crest.
of a dark-brown
color, deriving the
of the male pectinate to a greater or less extent. Jean Ingelow, High Tide on the Coast of Lincolnshire. epithet golden
£. iiBBertoiw 18 one of the lai-gest and handsomest moths ,., , r/ hit? «^„»;„ ^„^„^i„ .
as little endure the hammer as glass itself. judgment. What shall a Roman sink in soft repose,
!
Locke, Human Understanding, III. vi. 35. The nobles in great earnestness are going And tamely see the Britons aid his foes?
=Syn. 3. Fervent, fervid, warm, glowing, zealous, for- All to the senate-house. Shak., Cor., iv. 6. See them secure the rebel Gaul supply
ward, enthusiastic, impatient, sanguine, animated. I lent her some modern works : all these she read with Spurn his vain eagles and his power defy ?
Langhome, Ceesar's Dream.
eagerlf, v. t. [< ME. egren; from the adj.] avidity. Charlotte Bronte, The Professor, xviii.
To make eager ; urge ; incite. So Gawain, looking at the villainy done, 6. A lectern, usually of wood or brass, the up-
The nedy poverte of his houshold mihte rather egren Forbore, but in his heat and eagerness per part of which is in the shape of an eagle
hym to don felonyes. Chaucer, Boethius, iv. prose 6. Trembled and quivered. with outstretched wings supporting a book-rest,
Tennyson, Pelleas and Ettarre.
He angurt hym full euyll, & egerd hym with, the eagle being the symbol of Saint John the
flor the dethe of the dere his dole was the more. It was the sense that the cause of education was the Evangelist.
Destruction of Troy (E. E. T. 8.), 1. 7329. cause of religion itself that inspired Jiltred and Dunstan
alike with their zeal for teaching. [The minister] read from the eagle. Thackeray.
eager^ eagre (e'g6r), n. [Chiefly dial, or ar- J. It. Green, Conq. of Eng., p. 325.
7. A
gold coin of the United States, of the
chaic, and hence of unstable form and spell- Truth is never to be expected from authoi-s whose under-
(obs., archa-
value of 10 dollars, weighing 258 grains troy,
ing, but prop, eager; also written standings are warped with enthusiasm; tor they judge all
actions, and their causes, by their own perverse principles,
900 fine, and equivalent to £2 Is. Id. sterling.
ic, or dial.) eagre, eger, egor, egre, eygre, aigre,
ager, higre, hygre, and with alteration of g to and a crooked line can never be the measure of a straight — 8. In arch., a name for a pediment. 9. In —
one. Dryden, Ded. of Plutarch's Lives. the game of roulette, a spot, outside the regu-
k, aker, acker, etc., < ME. aker, akyr, a cor-
There is a certain enthusiasm in liberty, that makes hu- lar 36 numbers, upon which is the picture of
ruption of AS. "eagor, 'egor, only in eomp. man nature rise above itself in acts of bravery and heroism. If this is the winning number, the bank takes
edgor-, egor-stredm, ocean-stream, egor-here, the A. Hamilton, Works, II. 116.
in all liets except those made on that particular one. See
'ocean-host,' a flood, =
Icel. (egir, the ocean. roulette. Also called eagle-bird.— American eagle. See
bald eagle.— "Bald eagle, or bahi eani. a ct)mnion though
misapplied name for the white-headed eajjle of North
America, Haliaetus leucocephalus. This is the eagle which
,gle (prob. has been adopted as the national emblem on the arms of
formidable influx and surging of the tide in a fem. of aquilus, dark-colored, brown (cf. Lith. the United States, and is figured on some of its coins, be-
high wave or waves, up a river or an estuaiy ing popularly called "the American eagle," "the spread
aklas, blind) : see Aquila, aquiline, etc. The na- eagle," "the national bird, "the bird of freedom," etc.
a bore, as in the Severn, the Hooghly, and the tive E. name is earn : see earn^.'] 1. Properly,
"
1815 ear
eagle
the jaws are paved with rows of hexagonal teeth, the me- pret. *e6e (= leel. auka =
Goth, aukan), increase,
dian of which are of much greater breadth than length. round only in the pp. edcen : see eke. Cf . the
2. Any ray of the family Myliobatidce. These equiv. yean, which differs from ean only in the
rays are immensely broad, owing to the development of prefix.] To bring forth young; yean. See^ean.
the pectoral flns, and have a long, flexible tail, armed with
one or more serrated spines. They inhabit for the most Both do feed.
warm seas.
part tropical or As either promised to increase your breed
o. Having strong At eamng-time, and bring you lusty twins.
eagle-sighted (e'gl-si'ted), B. Jomon, Sad Shepherd, i. 2.
sight, as an eagle.
What peremptory eagle-sighted eye 0. E. An abbreviation of the commer-
E. and
Dares look upon the heaven of her brow, cial phrase errors and omissions excepted, fre-
That is not blinded by her majesty? quently appended to statements and accounts
Shak., L. L L, iv. 3.
when rendered.
eagles8(e'gles), «. [< eagle -e«».] + A female eanlingt (en'ling), n. [< ean + dim. -lingK
or" hen eagle. Sherwood. [Bare.] Cf. yeanling.] A lamb just brought forth.
eaglestone (e'gl-ston), n. [Tr. of Gr. amVw: AU the eanlings which were streak'd and pied
see aetiteii.'\ A
variety of argillaceous oxid of Should fall as Jacob's hire. Shak., M. of V., i. 3.
iron, found in masses varying from the size of a [Early mod. E. eare; < ME. ere,
Kild Eagle (HaliaUHS Uufctfkalut).
earl (er), «.
walnut to thatofaman'shead. In form these masses
ire, eare, < AS. edre = OS. ord =OFries. are,
are spherical, oval, or nearly reniform, or sometimes re-
eoJKi««.— Fishlng-ea^le. -Same a.5 (wprf;/.— Golden semble a parallelopiped with rounded edges and angles. dr = D.oor = MLG. LG. or = OHG. ord, MHG.
eagle. See def. 1. — Order of the Black Eagle, a l-nis-
They have a rough surface, and are essentially composed ore, or, G. ohr = Icel. eyra = Sw. ma = Dan.
Sau order founded by Frederick I. in 1701. 1 he number of concentric layere. The nodules often embrace at the ore = Goth, atiso = L. auris (dim. auricula, ML.
oricula, > It. orecchia = Sp. ormi = Pg. orelha =
of knlghU is limited to 30, exclusive of the princes of the center a kernel or nucleus, sometimes movable, and always
blood royal, and all must be of unquestioned nobility. dilfering from the exterior in color, density, and fracture.
The badge is a cross of 8 points, having In the center a To these hollow nodules the Greeks gave the name of Pr. aurelha = F. oreille, ear, = E. auricle see aw-. :
circle with the monogram FB (for Fnderieut Rex) ride, auricular, etc.) = Gr. ovc (ur-), also oi'of
the
;
eaalettonet, from a notion that the eagle transported them
four arms are enameled red, with the eagle of Prussia in to'her nest to facilitate the laying of her eggs. Also called (oiiar-), for "oimg (oioar-) = OBulg. Bulg. Croa-
black enamel between each two arms. The ribbon is
tian, Serv. ucho = Bohem. Pol. ueho = Russ.
aetites.
orange, but on occasions of ceremony the badge is worn \Miether the aetites or eagUMone hath that eminent
pendent to a collar, consisting alternately of Idack eagles property to promote delivery or restrain abortion, respec-
ukho = Lith. ausis = OPruss. ausins (pi. ace.),
holding thunderholta, and medallions bearing the same ear ; a general Indo-European name, prob. allied
tively applied to lower or upward parts of the body, we
monogram as the badge and also the monogram "Snum
cuique.'— Order of the Red Eagle (formerly Order of
shall not discourage common practice by our question. to Gr. uceiv, hear, perceive, L. audire, hear: see
Sir T. Browne, Vulg. Err., ii. 5. audience, audit, etc., auscultate, etc. Connection
the Red Eagle of Baifreuth ; also called Order t^fSitKmty),
an order founded by the Margrave
. of Bayreuth
,^
in 1706, and
eaglet (e'glet), n. [Earlier mod. E. also eofet; with Aear doubtful: seeAear.] 1. The organ of
- .
In 1792 adopted by Frederick WlUtam IL of Pnuaia on
The
.
Insignia or
"^ aiglette, dim. o£ aigle, eagle : see eajfie.]
^
A hearing; the apparatus of audition ; the acous-
sncceeding to the principality. present ^
young eagl i
eagle; a i-in_ „«„i„ , ,. u \. »,
little eagle. In heraldry, when three tic sense-organ any mechanism by which an
Se
the orteTare dlBeient from those of the original
quite dlBerent
order'are quite' ,
;
order. The badge is an 8-pointed cross, having In the or more eagles are borne on an escutcheon they are usually animal receives the impact of sound-waves and
called eaglet*, and always so when they are borne upon
center a medallion with a red eagle bearing the arms of perceives them as sound, in man and mammals
the Hohenzollern family. The arms of the croaa are of an onlinary, as a bend, lease, etc, or another bearing, or generally the ear consists of an external ear, which com-
white enamel, with an eagle of red enamel between each on a mantle. prises (1) the more or less funnel-shaped pinna and (2) the
two amis. The rilitKin is striped orange-color and white- When like an eglet I first found my love, external auditory meatus ; of a middle ear, eardrum, or
— Order of the White Eagle, an order founded at the For that the virtue I thereof would know. tympanum, closed from the external auditory meatus by
besiciiiing of the citthteeuth century by Augustus II. of Upon the nest I set it forth, to prove the tympanic membrane, traversed by a chain of small
Poland and Saxony, or, as is alleged, l«vived by him- It If it were of that kingly kind, or no. Drayton. bones, the auditory ossicles, named malleus, incus, and
has been adopted by the Czar of Knssia, and is coropoaed stapes, and communicating with the pharynx by the
of one class only. The badge is a crosa of 8 point*, bear- My dark tall pines, that . . .
atoo, grandmother, Icel. a/i, grandfather, di, the inner ear may con-
great-grandfather, and to L. av-un-culus, uncle, tain one or more concre-
tions, sometimes of great
av-ns, grandfather; the second syllable is ob- size, called otoliths or
scure. Jium remains in the surnames Eames ear-stones. An ear of
and Ames.] Uncle. some kind is recogniza-
ble in the great majority
gone to hem of the cite a-sembled he thanne, In its
of invertebrates.
A faoat than so ferschell for his eines sake. simplest recognizable
Waiiam of Paleme (E. E. T. 8.), L 3428. expression It is a mere
Henry Hotspur, and his eame capsule or vesicle, con-
The earl of Wor'ster. taining some hard Ixnly
Drayton, Polyolblon, xxli. answering to an otolith. External Ear. or Pinna.
i. helix; ». fossa <>''""]'''""
and so supposed to have
eant (en), v. i. [< ME. enen, bring forth young,
,
a„ anil fossa trianKulatis ; 3, fossii of lie IX,
an a,i,lit,,rv luniuon.
lory fiiiii-tlnti
^^ ^^^^ K:aphoidea: 4. antihelix
< AS. ednian, oontr. of edcnian, be pregnant, < See cochlea, labynntti, r 5. concha ; 6, antitragus ; 7. lobule
EMt>e.,.,n(,n.t.n.aiMtu). edceu, pregnant, Ut. increased, pp. of 'edcan, and cut under tympanic, i. tragus.
— ; — —
ear 1816 eared
2. The external ear alone, known
as the pinna, They instead of eating peaceably, /oil <w;e(A«r hij
will, earache (er'ak), n. Pain in the ear; otalgia.
the ears, each single one impatient to iiave all to itself.
auricle, or concha: as, the horse laid his ears
Swi/t, tiulliver's Travels, iv. 7.
earalt (er'al), a. [Improp. < earl + -al. Cf.
back. ««)•«?.] Receiving by the ear; aural auricular.
To give ear to. See give.— to meet the ear. See ;
In another YIe Iwn folk, that han gret Eres and longe,
that hangen doun to here Knees.
— To set by the ears, to make strife between;
meet. They are not true penitents that are merely earal, ver-
bal, orworded men, that speak more than they really in-
cause to quarrel.
MandevUle, Travels, p. 205. Who ever hears of fat men heading a riot, or herding tend. Ilncyt, Sermons (1658), p. 34.
Hollowing one hand against his far. togetlier in turbulent mobs? no — —
no it is your lean, — earbob (er'bob), «. An ear-ring or ear-drop.
To list a foot-fall. Tennysmi, Palace of Art hungry men who are continually worrying society, and [New Eng.]
setting tlie whole community by the ears.
S. In omith.: (a) The auriculars or packet of Irving, Knickerbocker, p. 157. I've got a pair o' ear-bobs and a handkerclier pin I'm a.
auricular feathers which cover the external goin' to give you, if you'll have them.
To sleep upon both ears, to sleep soundly.
ear-passage of a bird. (6) plumicorn or cor- A Let him set his iieart at rest 1 will remove this scruple
L. M. Alcott, Hospital Sketches, p. 36.
niplume; one of the "horns" of an owl. out of his mind, that lie may sleep securely upon both ears.
4. The sense of hearing; the power of distin- Abp. Bramhall, Works, III. 618. one of the bones composing the otocrane, otic
guishing sounds ; the power of nice perception Touching the ears, in the early church, a part of the capsule, or periotie mass, inclosing the organ
of the differences of sound. ceremony of baptizing catechumens, consisting of touching
the ears, and saying "Ephphatha" (be opened), a symbol
of hearing. —
2. One of the auditory ossicles or
The Poet must know to whose eare he maketh his rime, of the opening of the inulerstanding. — Up to the ears,
bonelets of the cavity of the middle ear an ;
and accommodate himselfe thereto, and not gine such ossiculum auditus, as the malleus, incus, or
over the earst, over head and ears, deeply absorbed
niusicke to the rude and barbarous as he would to the
learned and delicate eare.
or engrossed; overwhelmed: as, over head and ears in
debt, or in business.
stapes. See first cut under ear. 3. A hard—
Puttenham, Arte of Eng. Poesie, p. 72. concretion in the cavity of the inner ear; an
This Phedria out of hand got him a certain singing ear-stone, otosteon, or otolith (which see).
5. Specifically, in music, the capacity to appre- wench, skilful! in musicke, and fell in love with her over
ciate, analyze, and reproduce musical composi- the cares. Terence (trans.), 1614. ear-brisk (er'brisk), a. Having ears that mov&
or erect themselves quickly attentive. [Rare.]
tions by hearing them ; sensitiveness to musical A cavalier was up to the ears iu love with a very fine
;
intonation and to differences of pitch and qual- lady. Sir R. L'Estrange. He [the colt] was an ear-brisk and high-necked critter.
When I was quite embarked, discovered myself up to the S. Judd, Margaret, ii. 7.
ity in musical sounds as, a correct ear. Some-
:
tiines called a musical ear. ears in a contested election. Walpole, Letters, II. 353. ear-brush (er'brush), n. A brush consisting of
Sneer. I thought you had been a decided critic in music, Venus's ear, an ear-shell qr sea-ear a species of Uali- a piece of sponge attached to a handle, used to
;
otis, as the ormer, //. tuberculata: with allusion to the clean the interior (external auditory meatus)
as well as in literature.
Dangle, So I am —
but I have a bad ear, fable of Aphrodite. Wine Of one eart, good wine. One of the ear an aurilave. ;
of tlie annotators of Kabelais says " I have introduced
the same with good success in some parts of Leicester- ear-cap (er'kap), n. A cover for the ear against
:
Sheridan, Tlie Critic, i. 1.
When therefore I say that I have no ear, you will un- shire, and elsewhere, speaking of good ale, ale of one ear ; cold.
derstand me to mean —
for music. bad ale, ale of two ears. Because when it is good we give ear-cockle (er'kok"l), «. [< ear^ coekleK] + A
Lamb, Chapter on Eara. a nod witll one ear; if bad, we shake our head, that is,
disease in wheat caused by the presence in the
And men who have the gift of playing on an instrument give a sign with both ears ttiat we do not like it."
by ear are sometimes afraid to learn by rule, lest they grain of worms belonging to the genus Tylelen-
the fine white wine upon my conscience it is a kind
!
should lose it. J. H. Sewman, Gram, of Assent, p. 323. of taffatas wine ; liin, hin, it is of one ear (11 est ^ une chtts. Called in some parts of England purples.
6. A careful or favorable hearing ; attention Oreille). Urquhart, tr. of Rabelais, i. 5. ear-conch (er'konk), n. The shell of the ear;
heed. earif (er), i'- t- [< eari, »•] To listen to; hear the external ear, concha, auricle, or pinna.
I cried unto God with my voice, and he gave ear
. . .
with attention. ear-COnfessiont (er'kon-fesh'on), ». Auricular
unto me. Ps. Ixxvii. 1. I eared her language, lived in her eye. confession. See confession.
I gaue as good eare, and do consider as well the taulke Fletcher (and another). Two Noble Kinsmen, iii. 1. I shall dispute with a Greek about the articles of the
that passed, as any one did there. faith which my elders taught me and his elders deny, as-
Ascham, The .Scholemaster, p. 19.
ear^ (er), n. [Early mod. E. also eare; < ME. ear-con/ession.
Give every man thine ear, but few thy voice.
ere, ear, < AS. ear, contr. of orig. *ealior =
Tyndaie, Ans. to Sir T. More, etc. (Parker Soc, 18.50), p. 133.
Shak., Hamlet, i. 3.
ONorth. eJter, wither =
MD. acre, D. aar =
Pardons, pilgrims, ear-confession, and other popish mat-
But the bigots and flatterers who had his ear gave him
=
MLG. dr, are, LG. dr OHG. ahir, ehir, MHG. ters. Bp. Bale, Select Works, p. 57.
advice wliich he was but too willing to take. eher, G. dhre =
Icel. Sw. Dan. ax =
Goth, ahs, ear-cornet (er'k6r''net), n. small auricle or A
Macaulay, Hist. Eng., vi. an ear, =
L. aciis (accr-, orig. *acis-), chaff (see ear-trumpet worn in the hollow of the outer ear.
acerosc); connected with Goth, ahana, chaff, A
7t. Disposition to listen ; judgment ; taste. ear-cough (er'kof), «. cough provoked by
He laid his sense closer, and in fewer words, according = E. awiO- ; AS. egJ, a beard of grain, E. dial. irritation iu the ear.
to the style and ear of those times. Sir J. Denham. ail; L. acus {acu-), a needle; L. acies =
AS. eard (ard), n. [< ME. erd, cered, eard, home, <
ecge, E. edge, etc. : see awn'^, ail^, aeiis, aculeate,
8. A
part of any inanimate object having some
A
AS. eard, land, country, dwelling-place, home
spike or Vead of com or (= OS. ard, dwelling-place,
likeness to the external ear. (n) A projectiim from
aglet, edge, egg'^.'\
grain; that part of a cereal plant which eon- ing, etc.), connected with erian, E. ear^, plow
OHG. art, a plow- =
the side of a vessel or utensil made to be used as a handle:
as,the ears of a jar, pitcher, or other vessel. tains the flowers and seed. (see c«c3); prob. not connected with earth.J
Each iKtttle had a curling ear. The barley was in the ear, and the flax was boiled. If. Land; country; dwelling-place.
Through which the belt he drew. Ex. ix. 31.
God-bar him into paradis.
And hung a bottle on each side. Red ear, an ear of maize exceptionally of a deep-red color.
To make An erd al ful of swete blis.
iiis balance true. Such an ear, when
found, was made a source of sport at
Genesis and Exodus, 1. 209.
Coioper, John Gilpin. old-fashioned corn-huskings in the United States.
Over the fireplace were iron candlesticks hanging
. . . For each red ear a gen'ral kiss he gains. 2. [PartlyconfusedwithcarWil.] Earth. [Prov.
by their ears. S. Judd, ilai'garet, ii. 7. Joel Barlow, Hasty Pudding. Eng. and Scotch.]
(6) That part of a bell by which it is suspended the can- Great ardor was evinced in pursuit of the red ear fof
; He somnede iscrd [gathered an army] swulc nies nanire
non. See flret cut under betl. (c) A plate of soft metal at corn], for which piece of fortune the discoverer had the exr on erde. Layamon, I. 177.
the mouth of the mouthpipe of an organ, used to qualify privilege of a kiss from any lady he should nominate.
the tone by being bent more or less over the opening, (d) S. Judd, Margaret, ii. 6 ear-drop (er'drop), «. An ornamental pendant
The loop or ring l>y which the ram of a pile-driver is raised. to an ear-ring; an ear-ring with a pendant.
(c) In pnntiiui, a projecting piece on the edge of the frisket ear^ (er), v. i. [< ear"^, n.] To shoot, as an ear; Lady's ear-drops, the common garden fuchsia: so called
or of the composing-rule. II. Knight.K (/) One of the form ears, as corn. from the formation and pendency of its fiowers.
holes Ixtred in a spherical projectile for the insertion of
the points of the shell-hooks used in manipulating it.
The stalke was first set, began to eare ere it came to ear-dropper (eT'drop^er), «. It. An eaves-
lialfe growth, and the last not like to yeeld any thing at dropper. Davies.
9. In arch., same as crosset, 1 (o) A flea In the all. Capt. John Smith, True Travels, II. 236.
It is possible an ear-dropper might hear such tilings
ear. See jlea.—AU ear or ears, listening intently giv- (er), v. t. [Early mod. E. also eare ; < ME.
ing close attention to sounds or utterances.
;
ear^t talk'd at cock-pits and dancing schools.
prisons, through which he was able to overhear the con- kidney. Brockett; Halliwell. [Prov. Eng.] bling the external ear. in heraldry, animals bonie
versation of his prisoners, (b) An aural instrument for
the use of very deaf persons. It has a large pavilion se-
earablet (er'a-bl), a. [< ear^ + -able. Cf. ara- in coat-armor witli their ears differing in tincture from
that of the body are blazoned eared of such a metal or
cured by a swivel to a stand upon the fioor, and an elastic ble. ] Capable of being tilled being under cul- ;
color.
tnlie with a nozle to be hehl Uy the ear. E. II. Knight.— tivation; arable. 2. In omith., having conspicuous auricular
Drum of the ear. Same as tymjtanum. Qy^r head — He |the steward]further to see what demeanes of Ids
is
feathers, as the eared grebe, or having plumi-
and ears. See up to the ears, below.— To fall together
by the ears, to go together by the ears, to engage in
lordes is most meete to be taken into his handes, so well
for meddowe, pasture, as earable, &c. oorns, as various species of eared owls. 3. —
a fight or sciiffle quarreL
; Order o/ a Nobleman's House, Archajol., XIII. 316. In Mammalia, aurieulate ; having large or pe-
: — — ;
dog's ear. the time of Richard II. ), but is now hereditary in the family raany badges of infamy, effeminacy, vanity. Prynne.
ear-gland (er'gland), n. The warty glandular of the Howards, dukes of Norfolk, called the premier earls early (er'li), adv. [Early mod. E. also erhj,
of England. (See marthal.) There were formerly also earls
skin or tympanum of a batrachian, as a toad; erley ; < ME. erly, erli, ereli, north, arly, arely,
marshals in Scotland. See marUchal.
the parotid. ayrly, etc., < AS. "wrlice, ONorth. arlice, early
The list
ear-hole (er'hol), «. The aperture of the ear; Of those that claim their offices this day, (rare, the common form being «r, E. ere) (=
the outer orifice of the ear; the external audi- By custom of the coronation. . . . Icel. drliga, also contr. aria, adv., Dan. =
tory meatus or passage. Next, the duke of Norfolk,
He to be earl marshal. Shak., Hen. VIII., Iv. 1.
aarle, adj. and adv.), < eer, ere, early, -lice, +
eariness, ". See eeriness. E. -Iy2: see erei.] Near the initial point of
earing'^ (er'ing), ». [< earl -i»<7l.] +
A small Earl palatine. See palatitte. some reckoning in time in or during the first ;
rope attaehed'to the cringle of a sail, by which ear-lap (er'lap), «. [< ME. erelappe, < AS. ear- part or period of some division of time, or of
it is bent or reefed. When attached to the head- 1"??." ir Oi ries^arleppa, arlippa =^1 MD. dim. some course or procedure: as, come early;
cringle for bending, it is called a head-earing; when at- oorlapken Norw. orilap, oreUpp Sw. orlapp = = early in the day, or in the century; early in his
tached to the reef -cringle, a reej-earin^j. Dan. drel(ep (Sw. usually orflik or iirtipp, = career.
If the second mate is a smart fellow, he will never let Dan. oreflip) G. ohrldpp-ehen), ear-lap, < eare, = And Ewein that gladly roos euer erly more than eny
any one take either of these posts from him but if he is ear, Iteppa, lap: see earl and topi.]
; +
1. The other. ilerlin (E. E. T. S.), iii. 448.
wanting either in seamanship, strength, or activity, some tip
better man will get the bunt and earinge from him.
of the ear. 2. One of a pair of covers for — Those that seek me early shall find me. Prov. viil. 17.
R. U. Dana, Jr., Before the Mast, p. 28. the ears in cold weather, made of cloth or fur
Satirday, erUy in the mornyng, we toke our Jorneyne
From clue to earlsi;. .^««,. so as to incase them [U. S.] towardys Jherusaleni.
x.„^..u=.v,c»xx^. .See due.
earing- (trine), H.- f Verbal n. of eara.f.l The ^^'"l^PP®* (*'" '^P^*)' "• 1. An auricular cu- Torkington, Diarie of Eng. Travell, p. 25.
' ^
forming of' ears of corn. taneous fold or flesh jf excrescence of a bird; Diffuse thy lieneflcence early, and while thy treasures
Their winter some call Popanow, the spring Cattapeak,
a kind of wattle hanging from the ear : usually call thee master. Sir T. Browne, Christ Mor., L 5.
the sommer Cohattayough. the earing of their Come Ne- called ear-lobe. As the city of Thebes was so antient, sciences flourished
piuough, the harvest and fall of leafe Taquitock. In the Datch ral)-breed of the Spanish fowl the white In it very early, particularly astronomy and philosophy.
Capt. John Smith, True Travels, I. 128. ear-lappett are developed earlier than In the common Pococke, Description of the East, I. 109.
earingSf (er'ing), n. [< ME. "ering, < AS. er- Spanish breed. Darwin, Var. of Animals and Plants, p. 263. =Syn. Early, Soon, Betimes. Early is relative, and notes
occurrence before some fixed or usual time, or before the
iiitj, eriung, verbal n. of erian, plow, ear: see 2. Same as ear-lap, 2. [Rare.] course of time had far advanced beyond that i>olnt as,
ear3.] A
plowing of land. See «ar3. earldom (6rl'dum),n. [< JIE.erfdoni, eorldom, he rose early (that is, he rose before the usual time of
:
earing nor harvest Gen. xlv. a. Of the eleven earldome, three were now (ISOOl rested In shortly, or in a short time after the present or some fixed
the king, who, besides being earl of Lancaster, Lincoln, point of time as, come so<m ; he left soon after my arrivaL
:
earing-cringle (er'ing-kring'gl), n. See cringle. Betimes (by time) means in good time for some speciflc
and Hereford, was also earl of Derby Leicester, and Nortli-
earisht (er'ish), a. [<earl + -<»Al.] Auricular. »nipton. object or all useful purposes as, he rose betimes.
:
Stubiu, Const. Hist, i .103.
Dacies. early (^r'li), <i. ; compar. earlier, superl. earliest.
His [Antichrbt's] idolatroiu altars, hls«aruA confestlon,
earldorman.
form of Anglo-Saxon »i. A false [< ME. 'erlich, earlich, found only once as adj.,
his honsel in one kind for the lay, ealdorman, due to confusion with Anglo-Saxon
and all his petting
. . . and prob. due to the adv. : see eaWy, adv.] 1,
; pedlary, is utterly banished and driven out of this land eorl. Sec alderman. Pertaining to the first part or period of some
&i^.. Works, Ili.V earl-duck (trl'duk), v. [Var. of liarle (Ork-
division of time, or of some course in time
ear-klssing (er'kis'ing), a. Kissing (that is, ''^y)» name of same bird.] The red-breasted being at or near the beginning of the portion
whispiTfd in) the ear. merganser. SicainaoH. [Prov. Eng.]
of time indicated or concerned: as, an early
You have heard of the news abroad I mean the whis- earles-pennyt (^rlz'pen'i \ n. [ME. : see arles,
; hour; early manhood; the early times of the
pered ones, for they are yet bat earkitnng arinuuents. arle-i>eiiiiy.'\ iloney in ratification of a con- church.
Shak., Lear, ii. 1. tract earnest-money. ;
In their early days they had wings.
earl (ferl), n. [< ME. erl, earlier eorl, earl, as a earless (er'les), a. [< earl -f- -less.'] 1. De- Bacon, lloral Fables, vl.
designation of rank, < AH. eorl, an earl, a noble- prived of ears; having the ears cropped. The delinquencies of the early part of his administra-
man of high rank, nearly equiv. to ealdorman Earlett on high stood unabash'd Defoe. tion had been atoned for by the excellence of the later
(see alderman) first in the Kentish laws, but
; Pope, Dnnclad, IL 147. part ilacaulay, Warren Hastings.
its common use as a title and designation of 2. Destitute of ears; not eared; exauriculate: Vnfortunately blighted at an early stage of their growth.
offipc Ix-^ins with the Scandinavian inva.sion, as, the earless seals. 3. Specifically, in omitli.,
through the influence of the cognate Icel. Sw- having no plumicoms: as, the earless owls.
— Hawthorne, Old Manse, I.
arend = MLG. am, arne, erne, arnt, arent, LG. em, a pledge, emo, give a pledge. Cf. L. arrha,
arend = OHG. MHG. am = Icel. Sw. Dan. iirn, arra, earnest: see arles and arrha.'] 1. A por-
an eagle also without the formative -n, OHG.
; tion of something given or done in advance as
aro, MHG. ar, G. aar = Icel. ari = Goth, ara, a pledge security in kind ; specifically, in law,
;
an eagle (in comp. MHG. adel-am, also adel-ar, a part of the price of goods or service bai gained
G. adler = D. adelaar, eagle, 'noble eagle'),
lit. for, which is paid at the time of the bargain
akin to OBulg. orilii = Bulg. Slov. orel = Serv. to evidence the fact that the negotiation has
orao = Bohem. Orel = Pol. orzel, orel (barred ended in an actual contract. Hence it is said to
= Buss, orelii = OPruss. arelie = Lith. arelis, hind the bargain. Sometimes the earnest, if trifling in
amount, is not taken into account in the reckoning.
erelw = Lett, erglis, an eagle, appar. orig. the '
bird' by eminence, = Gr. bpviq (stem bpvid-, dial. Giving them some money in hand as an earnest of the
rest. Ludlow, Memoirs.
opvtx-, orig. bpvi-), also bpvcov, a bird, so called
from its soaring, < bpyvvai {^/ *op) = L. oriri, 2. Anything that gives pledge, promise, assur-
rise, soar (> ult. E. orient), = Skt. -/ar, move.] ance, or indication of what is to follow ; first-
An eagle. This is the original English name for the fruits.
eagle. It is now chiefly poetical or dialectal, or used, as Poul tellith in this epistle of fredom of Cristene men,
in zoology, in special designations like bald earn. how thei have ther ernes here, and fully fredom in hevene.
That him ne hauede grip [gripe vulture] or em. Wycli/, Select Works (ed. Arnold), II. 277.
Havelok, 1. 672. He who from such a kind of Psalmistry, or any other
An em, in stede of his baner,he set vp of golde. verbal Devotion, without the pledge and earnest of suta-
Robert of Gloucester, p. 215. ble deeds, can be perswaded of a zeale and true righteous-
ness in the person, hath much yet to learn.
Bald earn. See bald eat^e, under eagle.
Milton, Elkonoklastes, 1.
earn*! (6m), v. i. [A corruption of yearn^, by Ev'ry moment's calm that soothes the breast
confusion with earn", equiv. to yearn^.] To Is giv'n in earnest of eternal rest.
yearn. Covrper, An Epistle.
And ever as he rode his hart did eai-ne = Syil. Earnest, Pledge. Earnest, \\^& pledge, \mec\iv\iy
To prove his puissance in battell brave. given for the doing of something definite in the future, and
Spenser, F. Q., I. i. 3.
generally returned when the conditions of the contract
eam^t (6rn), v. i. Same as yearn^. have been fulfilled. In 2 Cor. i. 22 and v. 6 we read tliat
eamesti (er'nest), n. [< ME. ernest, eornest, < the Spirit is given as the earnest of indefinite future favors
from God in Blackstone we find " a penny, or any portion
;
AS. eornest, eornost, eornust, zeal, serious pur- of tlie goods delivered as earnest." Whether literal or
Early English Architecture.— Galilee Porch and South Transept of
Lincoln Cathedral.
pose, =
OFries. emst, Fries, emste MD. aernst, = figurative, earnest is always a pledge in kind, a part paid
D. ertist =
MLG. ernest, emst, LG. emst OHG. = or given in warrant that more of the same kind is forth-
came grouped in a manner that led to the development ernust, MHG.
ernest, G. emst, zeal, vigor, seri- coming; as in "Macbeth," i. 3, Macbeth is hailed thane
of tracery, and the style passed into the Decorated style. of Cawdor "for an eai'nest of a gi-eater honor." See also
ousness; cf. Icel. er», brisk, vigorous. The OHG. " Cynibeline," i. 6. Pledge is often used figuratively for
Also called the First Pointed or Lancet style.
A mark on the ear by which a sheep or other ing,' but there is no authority in AS. or ME. the present, earnest being preferred for that which is of
the same nature with the thing promised, and pledge for
domestic animal is known. Hence 2. Figur- — for this sense, on which a comparison with Icel.
orrosta, mod. orosta, orusta, a battle, is found-
that which is materially different.
atively, in lato, any mark for identification, as Man, if not yet fully installed in his powers, has given
& privy mark made on a coin. 3. Any charac- — ed.]
ness.
It. Gravity; serious purpose; earnest- much earnest of his claims.
Marg. Fuller, Woman in 19th Cent., p. 15.
teristic or distinguishing mark, natural or oth-
The hoote ernest is al overblowe.
er, by which the ownership or relation of some- Chaucer, Good Women, 1. 1287.
Seldom has so much promise, seldom have so great ear-
nestsot great work, been so sadly or so fatally blighted.
thing is known. Therewith she laught, and did her earnest end in jest. Stubbs, Medieval and Modern Hist., p. 10.
What distinguishing marks can a man fix upon a set of Spenser, F. Q., II. vi. 23.
Intellectual ideas, so as to call himself proprietor of them? Bright pledge of peace and sunshine.
They have no earmarks upon them, no tokens of a par- 2. Seriousness; reality; actuality, as opposed Vaughan, The Rainbow.
ticular proprietor. Burrows. to jesting or feigned appearance. eamest^t (fer'nest), v. t. [< earnest^, «.] To
An element ofdisproportion, of grotesqueness, earmark Take heed that this jest do not one day turn to earnest. serve as an earnest or a pledge of.
of the barbarian, disturbs us, even when it does not dis- Sir P. Sidney.
gust, in them all [songs of the Trouveres). This little we see is something in hand, to earnest to ua
But take it earnest wed with sport. those things which are in hope.
Lowell, Study Windows, p. 243.
And either sacred unto you. T. Shepard, Clear Sunshine of the Gospel, Ded.
'earmark (er'mark), v. t. [< earmark, m.] To !re7iny«o?i, Day-Dream, Epil.
j.r t /x/ 4.*-i\ +
mark, as sheep, by cropping or slitting the ear. " [< earnest^
in earnest, or in good earnest, with a serious purpose; «^?^f
-*"'
*i^ljt„
s,A-,.,m,fj". T.tlf''
^«^c.at
seriously; not in sport or jest, noi- in a thoughtless, trifling ful.]
^ Serious; = earnest..
For feare least we be reputed,
like rogues should
And for eare-niarked beasts abroad be bruted. way as, they set to work in earnest.
: Lat us stinte of emestful matere.
Spenser, Mother Hub. Tale. What ever he be he shall repente the daye Chaucer, Clerk's Tale, 1. 1176.
= MLG. am, aren, arne, erne, OHG. aran, am, tion; eager; urgent; importvmate; pressing;
desire ; with fixed attention.
MHG. erne (< OHG. pi. emi), harvest (whence instant : as, earnest in prayer. Thenne euelez on erthe ernestly grewen.
OHG. arnot, pi. arnodi, MHG. ernede, ernde, G. He was moat earnest with me, tohaue me say my mynde
Alliterative Poems (ed. Morris), L 2227-
emde, dmde, erndte, drndte, usually ernte, har- also. Ascham, The Scholeniaster, p. 71. Being in an agony, he prayed more earnestly.
vest), =
Icel. (inn for 'asnu, work, a working
The common people were earnest with this new King
Luke xxii. 44.
season, =
Goth, asans, harvest, harvest-time for peace with the Tapanecans. There stood the king, and long time earnestly
Looked on the lessening ship.
(cf Russ. oseni, harvest, autumn) ; whence
.
Purehas, Pilgrimage, p. 792.
William Morris, Earthly Paradise, II. 309.
Goth, asneis =
OHG. asni =
AS. esne, a hired With much difficulty he suffer'd me to looke homeward,
Money
laborer.] 1. To gain by labor, service, or per- being very earnest with nie to stay longer. earnest-money (er'nest-mun'^i), ».
Evelyn, Diary, Sept 10, 1877.
paid as earnest to bind a bargain or ratify and
formance; acquire; merit or deserve as com-
pensation or reward for service, or as one's real confirm a sale. Also called hand^noney.
Some of the magistrates were very earnest to have irons
presently put upon them. earnestness (fer'nest-nes), ». 1. Intentness or
or apparent desert ; gain a right to or the pos- Winthrop, Hist. New England, II. 176.
session of: as, to earn a dollar a day; to earn zeal in the pursuit of anything ; eagerness
2. Possessing or characterized by seriousness strong or eager desire; energetic striving: as,
a fortune in trade; to earn the reputation of
in seeking, doing, etc. strongly bent; intent: to seek or ask with earnestness; to engage in a
;
being stingy.
Grant that your stubljomness as, an earnest disposition. work with earnestness.
Slade you delight to earn still more and more On that prospect strange So false is the heart of man, so contradictory are . . .
Extremities of vengeance. ' Their earnest eyes they fix'd.
its actions and intentions, that some men pursue virtue
Beaumont, Psyche, 11. 119.
J. Milton, P. L., x. 663.
with great earnestness, and yet cannot with patience look
Every joy that life gives must be earned ere it is se-
cured and how hardly earned, those only know who have
3. Strenuous; diligent: as, earnest efforts. 4. — upon it in another. Jer. Taylor, Works (ed. 1835), I. 799.
;
Serious ; weighty ; of a serious, important, or Moderation costs nothing to a man who has no earnest-
wrestled for great prizes. Charlotte Bronte, Shirley, vii.
weighty nature ; not trifling or feigned. ness. II. N. Oxenham, Short Studies, p. 140.
What steward but knows when stewardship earns its wage? They who have no religious earnestness are at the mercy,
Browning, Ring and Book, I. 44. They whom earnest lets do often hinder.
Hooker, Ecclcs. Polity. day by day, of some new argument or fact, which may over-
2. In base-ball, to gain or secure by batting or Your knocks were so earnest that the very sound of them take them, in favor of one conclusion or the other.
base-running, and not by the errors or bad play J. H. Newman, Gram, of Assent, p. 414.
made me start. Bunyan, Pilgrim's Progress, p. 244.
of opponents: as, one side scored 5, but had Life is real, life is earnest. Longfellow, Psalm of Life. 2. Anxious care ; solicitude strength of feel- ;
1819 earth
earnest-penny
Withinne a se al the gold withinne
tyme 3e schal
(fer'nest-pen'i), n. Same as ear- park for game: see eddish. The vdt. origin and litil
earnest-pennyt the Mercuric turned into erthe as sotile as flour.
nest-money. the relations of the two words are not clear.] Book 0/ (iuinte Essence (ed. Furnivall), p. 8.
Stubble; a stubble-field: same as eddish, 1. Two mules' burden of earth. 2 KL v. 17.
Accept this gift, most rare, most fine, most new
The eamtit-venny of a love so fervent. ear-shell (er'shel), «. The common name of The majority of the cities and towns [of Greece) com-
Ford, Love's Sacrifice, lu 2. any shell of the family iraJiO«d<E; a sea-ear: so plied with the demand made upon them, and gave the
An argument of greater good hereafter, and an earnest- called from the shape Guernsey ear-shell, Hali- [Persian] king earth and water.
vmny of the perfection of the present grace, that is, of the otit liihfrcxdata same as onner. : ,
Von Sanke, Univ. Hist, (trans.), p. 165.
Hanis of glory. Jer. Taylor, Worl. (ed 1836), i^265_
(er'shot), ». Reach of hearing; the 4. The inhabitants of the globe ; the world.
ear-net (er'net), »K A
covering for the ears of "T^Jrrl. I;^ „i,:_u" i „„ •u„ i,->„wi
distance at which words may be heard. The whole earth was of one language. Gen. xi. 1.
horses, made of netted cord, to keep out flies, the hopeful lady of my earth.
FuU Gomez, stand you out of earshot. I have something to She is
eamfult (^rn'ful), n. [Avar, of yearn/«7.] say to your wife in private. Dryden, Spanish Friar. Shak., E. and J., i. 2.
of anxiety; causing anxiety or yearning. There were numerous heavy oaken benches, which, by 5. Dirt; hence, something low or mean.
The eorn/W smart which eats my breast. the united efforts of several men, might be brought within What ho slave Caliban
! ! 1
P. FUtcher, Piscatory Eclogues, T. earthot of the pulpit. Mrs. Gaskell, Sylvias Lovers, vi.
Thou earth, thou speak. Shak., Tempest, i. 2.
!
A.S. The Papists' lenten preparation of forty days' earshri/t. animal hides itself.
Cartwrigkt, Admonition.
desert, reward, verbal n. of earnian, earn: see Seeing I never stray'd beyond the cell.
earn^.] That which is earned ; that which is Your earetkrift (one part of your penance) is to no pur- But live like an old badger in his earth.
CaifhiU, Answer to Martiall, p. 243.
gained or merited by labor, servioej or per- pose. Tennyson, Holy Grail.
formance ; re ward wages ; compensation : used ear-snail (er'snal),
; n. A snaU of the family 7. In chmn., a name formerly given to certain
chiefly in the plural. Otinida. inodorous, dry, and uninflammable substances
•mu is the great eipense of the poor that takes up ear-SOret (er'sor), a. and n. I. a. Morose; quar- which are metallic oxids, but were formerly re-
almost all their eaminf/s. Locke, relsome apt to take offense.
;
garded as elementary bodies. They are insoluble
A tax im that part of profits known as earning* of man- H. n. Something that offends the ear. \n water, difficultly fusible, and not easily reduced to the
a>r-meiit. Eiuyc. Brit., XXIII. 88.
.^^ perpetual jangling of the chimes too in all the metallic state. "The most important of them are alumina,
TVerbal n. of earrfi, r.] great towns of nanders is no small earsore to us. zirconia, glucina, yttria, and thorina. The alkaline earths,
flamlne^ ffir'ninc) n.
baryta, strontia, lime, and magnesia, have more the prop-
[Pror. Eng.] r»m Bro«m, Works. I. 306.
fcunet. Brockftt. erties of the alkalis, being somewhat soluble in water, and
eaming-grass (6r'ning-gras), n. The common earstt, adv. An archaic spelling of erst. having an alkaline taste and reaction.
butterwort, I'inguicitla vulgaris: so called from ear-Stone (er'ston), n. An otolith. The sub- 8. In elect. : (o) The union of any point of a
its property of curdling milk. [Prov. Eng.] stance of these concretions is often called brain telegraph-line, submarine cable, or any system
ear-pick (er'pik), ». An instrument for elean- irnry (which see, tmder ivory). of conductors charged with or conveying elec-
iuj,' the ear. ear-string (er'string), n. An ornamental ap- tricity with the ground. It is generally made by Join-
ear-piece (er'pes), ». [Tr. of F. oreilUre.'] A
pendage worn by men in the seventeenth cen- ing the point at which the earth is to be established by
means of a good conductor with a metallic plate buried
name given to the side-piece of the burganet tury ; a silk cord, usually black, passed through in moist earth, or with metallic water-pipes or gas-pipes,
or open helmet of the sixteenth century, usual- the lobe of the ear and hanging in two,
four,
which, on account of their large surface of contact with
ly made of splints, and covering a leather strap or more strands, sometimes so low as
to lie tlie earth, usually afford excellent earth-connections, (ft)
"
Com- upon the shoulder, sometimes only two or three
or chin-bana to which they are riveted
inches long. In all the representations of this
A fault in a telegraph-line or cable, arising out
pare cheek-piece. Also caUed oreillire. of an accidental contact of some part of the
ear-piercer (er'per'sfer), n. [Tr. of F. perce- fashion it is limited to the left ear. metallic circuit with the earth or with more
The earwig. earthi^ (*rth), n. [Early mod E. also erth; <
oreille.] or less perfect conductors connected with the
ear-piercing (er' per' sing), a. Piercing the ear, ME. erthe, eorthe, < AS. eorthe OS. crtha, = earth.— Adamlc earth. See Adatnic— Axis of the
as a shrill or sharp sound. erdha =
OFries. erthe, irthe, erde, NFries. yerd earth, see axisi.— BaA earth, in elect., a connection
O, farewell =
MD. erde, aerde, D. aarde MLG. erde = = with the earth in which great resistance is offered to the
Farewell the neighing steed, and the shrill trump. OHG. erda, erdha, MHG. G. erde Icel. jordh = passage of the current. —
Black earth, a kind of coal
which is pounded fine and used l>y jiainters in fresco.—
The spirit-Btirrlng drum, the ear-piereing fife.
SA(ii;.,UtheUo, ill. 3.
8w. jord =
Dan. jord =
Goth, airtha, earth = Chlan earth. See CA fan.— Cologne earth, a kind of
(OTeut. 'ertha, in L. as Hertha, as the name of light bastard ocher, of a deep-brown color, transparent,
ear-pocket (er'pok'et), n. The little pouch a goddess) ; allied to OHG. ero, earth, Icel. jiirfi, and durable in water-color painting. It is an earthy va-
formed by a fold of skin at the root of the outer gravel, Gr. ipa-l^e, to the earth, on the ground. riety of lignite or partially fossilized wood, and occurs in
ear of some animals, as the cat. an irregular bed from 30 to 60 feet deep neiir Cologne,
Usually, but without much probability, referred whence the name.— Compression of the earth. See
ear-reach (er'rech), n. Hearing-distance ; ear- to the \/ 'ar, plow, whence ear'^, earUfi, eard, comprroton.- Dead earth, or total earth, in elect., an
shot, [liare.] arable, etc.] 1. The terraqueous globe which eartn-connection offering almost no resistance to the pas-
The sound of it might have pierced your Mnse* with we inhabit, it is one of the planets of the solar system, sage of the current, as when a telegraph-wire falls ui>on
gladness, had you been in ear.rtaek of it. being the tlilrd in order from the sun. The figure of the a railroad-track, or when the conductor of a submarine
B. Jatum, Epicotne, ii. 2. cable has a consideralde surface in actual contact with
esrth is approximately that of an ellipsoid of revolution
Some inviaible eare might be in unbosh within the ear- or oblate spheroid, the axes uf whieh measure 12,756,606 the water. —
Earth of alum, a substance obtained by
water
precipitjiting the earth from alum dissolved in by
T'orh of hii word*. FxdUr, Holy 8Ute. meters and 12,713,042 meters, or 7,926 statute mile* and
and 7,889 statute miles and 1,023 yards, respec- adding .minionia or potassa. It is used for paints.- Earth
made by lacer- 1,041 yards,
ear-renti (er'rent), ». Payment tively, thus making the compression 1 203. The radius of
:
of bone,a phosphate of lime existing in bones after calci-
ation or loss of the ears. the earth, considered as a sphere, is 3,068 mUes. The mean
nation.— Ends of the earth. See end.— Figure of the
density of the whole earth Is 6.6, or aboot twice that of the earth, the shape and size, not of the earth's surface, but
A hole to thrust your heads in. of the mean sea-level continued under the land at the
For which you should pay ear-rent. B. Jonton. crust, and its interior is probably metallic. The earth re-
heights at which water would stand in canals open to the
volves upon It* axis in one sidereal day, which is S minutes
ME. erering, eerryng, sea also, the generallied figure or ellipsoid which most
ear-ring (er'ring), n. [< snd S6.tl seconds shorter than a mean solar day. It* axis ;
<AS. edrhring (= D. oorring = OHG. orring, remains nearly parallel to itself, but has a large but alow nearly coincides with the figure of the sea-level.
MHG. orrinc, G. okrring = 8w. orring = Dan. gyration which produces the precession of the equinoxes.
The whole earth reToirea about the sim iu an ellijise in one
If Ijictantius affirm that the Ji<7tire of the earth is plane,
or Austin deny there are antipodes, though venerable fa-
orenring), < edre, ear, +
hring, ring: see ear^
sidereal year, which is MS days, 6 hours, 9 minutes, and 8 thers of the church and ever to be honoured, yet will not
and ringK'] A
ring or other ornament, ustially seconds. The ecliptic, or plane of the earth's orbit, is In- their authorities prove sufficient to ground a belief there-
of gold or silver, and with or without precious clined to the equator by B* 2r 12" .68 mean oliliquity for on. Sir T. Broume, Vulg. Err., i. 7.
stones, worn at the ear, the usual means of at- January 0, 1880, according to Hansen. The earth is dis- a connection with the earth in which
tant from the sun by about 93,000,000 miles.
Oood earth, in elect. .
tachment being the ring itself, ora hook or the current meets witli little resistance in its passage from
A noblll tree, thou secomoure ; the wire or conductor to the earth.- Heavy earth. Same
projection which forms a part of it, passing I blisse hym that the on the erthe
brought as 6ary(a.— Intermittent earth, in elect., an earth-con-
through the lobe. Among Oriental* ear-rinntuiTe been York Playt, p. 214. nection such as is produced by a wire touching at inter-
used by both sexea from Um earliest times. In England One expression only in the Old Testament gives ns the vals conducting IkkIIcs in connection with the earth.
they were worn by tlw Komaniied Britons and by Anglo- word earth in its astronomical meaning,— that in the magnetic poles of the earth. See magnetic— faxtial
gai'ins. After the tenth century the fashion seems to hare
twenty-sixth chapter of Job ;
— eajXh, in elect., a poor earth-connection, such as exists
declined throogliout Europe, and ear-rings are neither
" He stretched out the north over empty space when a telegraphwire rests upon the ground, when its
found in graves nor seen in paintings or sculptures. The insulators are defective, or when it touches any conduc-
wearing of ear-rings was reintroduced into England in He hanged the earfAupon nothing." tor connected with the earth, but offering considerable
the sixteenth century, and Stubbs, writing in the time of Dawson, Nature and the Bible, p. 104.
resistance.- To bring to the eartht, to bury. Eng.
Qneen Elizabeth, says, "The women are not ashamed to It appears, . . . from what we know of the tides of the QiUts. —
To put to eaxth, in elect., to join or connect a
nuke hole* in their ears whereat they hang rings and other ocean, tliat tlw earth as a whole is more rigid than glass, conductor with the earth.- To run to earth, in hmUing,
iewels of gold and precious stones.' The use of ear-rings and therefore that no very large portion of its interior to chase the game, as a fox, to its hole or burrow. = Syn.
by women lias continued to the present time. In the can be liquid. Clerk MaxweU, Heat, p. 21. 1. Earth, World, Globe. Earth is used as the distinctive
seventeenth centunr they were worn by men ; and sea- name of our planet in the solar system, as Mercury, Ve-
faring men, especially uf the southern nations of Europe, What are these nus, Earth, Mars, etc. It is used not only of soil, but of
have retained the use of them, commonly in the form of So wither'd, and so wild in their attire. the planet regarded as material, and also as the home of
gold hoops, down to onr own times. Among women the That look not like the inhabitants o' the earfA, the human race. (See Job i. 7 ; Ps. Iviii. 11.) World has
And yet are ou'tT SAoi:., Macbeth, I. 111.
sliape of ear-rings clianges completely with the fashions, especial application to the earth as inhabited hence we
89.
;
long, heavy pendants being succeeded by smaller ones, say, he is gone to a better woWif ; are there other toorldl
and these by single stone* in almost invisible cbatons, set 2. The matter of the globe, in distinction
solid
besides this 1 It belongs, therefore, especially to the sur-
close to the lobe of the ear. from water and air; the materials composing face of the earth ; hence we speak of sailing around the
Without eorinfw of silaer or some other metal . . you . the solid parts of the globe; hence, the firm teorid, but not the e/irth. Globe makes prominent the
shall see no Knsse woman, be she wife or maide. land of the earth's surface; the groimd: as, i»undness of the earth : as, to circunmavigate the globe.
Hakiuyfi Voyage; I. 497. The man of the earth, earthy. 1 Cor. xv. 47.
he fell to the earth. first Is
ear-rivet (er'riv'et), n. One of the otoporpaa God called the dry land earth. Gen. i. 10. The Sun flies forward to his brother Sun ;
of a hydrozoan. See otoporpa. The dark £orf A follows wheel'd In her ellipse.
8. The loose material of the earth's surface; Tennyson, Golden Year.
Earse, n. See Erse. the disintegrated particles of solid matter, in Poets, whose thoughts enrich the blood of the world.
earsh, endl (irsh), n. [E. dial., also errish, erige,
distinction from rock; more particularly, the Tennyson, Princess, li.
aritih, and by contraction ash, < ME. ascke,
combinations of particles constituting soil, In the four quarters of the globe, who reads an Ameri-
stubble, appar. corrupted, by association with
mold, or dust, as opposed to unmixed sand or can Itook?
asrhe, ashes, from reg. 'ersch, < AS. *erae, 'terse, Sydney Smith, Rev. of Seybart's Annals of United States.
clay. Earth, lieing regarded by ancient philosophers as
found only in comp. ersc-hen, ar$oJten, equiv. simple, was calleil an element and in popular hinguiige
; On the heail of Frederic is all the blood which was shed
to edisc-hen, a quail (see eddith-heit), edise, and we stiU hear of the four elements, fire, air, earth, and in a war which raged during many years and in every
presumably 'ersc, 'terse, meaning a pasture, a water. quarter of the globe. Macaulay, Frederic the Great
; : . :
S. To put underground; bury; inter. were feculent ear^/a'?wss. Boyle, Works, III. 10a.
< AS. eorlh-draca, < eorthe, earth, -I- draca,
Upon your prannam's grave, that very night 2. Intellectual or spiritual coarseness; gross-
A\ e earthed her in the shades. drake, dragon.] In Angto-Saxonmyth., a myth-
ness.
B. Jon^on, Sad Shepherd, ii. 1. ical monster resembling the dragon of chivalry.
The grossness and earthiness of their fancy. Hammfmd.
Here swans with nightingales set spells,
silver He sacrifices his c wn life in destroying a frightful earth-
Which sweetly charm the traveller, and raise drake, or dragon. W. Spalding. earthliness (erth'li-nes), n. 1. The quality of
Earth's earthed monarchs from their hidden cells.
earth-eater (^rth'e't6r),n. l. One who or that being earthly; grossness. 2. Worldliness; —
John Ropers, To Anne
But now he hath served the sentence out, . .
liradstreet.
—
which eats earth. 2. Li ornith., specifically, strong attachment to earthly things. 3t. —
Why not earth him and no more words?
.
Kyctibius grandis, the ibigau (which see). Want of durability ; perishableness ; frailty.
T. B. Atdrich, The Jew's ME. Fidler.
Gift. earthen (6r'thn), a. [< erthen, eorthen (AS.
3. To cover with earth or mold; choke with not recorded) = D. aarden = OHG. erdin, irdin, earthling (erth'ling), n. [Not found in ME.
earth. MH6. erdin, erden, G. erden. now irden Goth. = (ef. AS. eorthling, yrthling, a farmer, a tiller of
the earth) (= G. erdling); < earth^ + -ling'^.'] If.
O thou, tlie fountain of whose better part ai'rWfem*, earthen as carWj- -1- -e»j2.]
; Made of
Is earthed and gravel'd up with vain desire. earth ; made of clay or other earthy substance An inhabitant of the earth; a creature of this
Quarteg. Emblems, i. 7. as, an earthen vessel. world; a mortal.
Earth up with fresh mould the roots of those auriculas Go, and tac the erthene litil wyn"/e8sel of the crockere.
Humorous earthlinys will control the stai*s.
which the frost may have uncovered. B. Jonson, Masque of Hymen.
Wyclif, Jer. xix. 1.
Evelyn, Calendarium Hortense. To earthlinijs, the footstool of God, that stage which he
A beggarly account of empty boxes.
raised for a small time, seemeth magnificent.
4. In elect, to put to earth; place in connec- Green earthen pots, bladders, and musty seeds.
Drummond.
tion with the earth. Shak., R. and J.,v. 1.
In dry weather they [conductors] are not earthed at all Do not grudge 2. One strongly attached to worldly things ; a,
well, and a strong charge may then surge up and down To pick out treasures from an earthen pot. worldling.
them, and light somebody else's gas in the most surpris- Herbert. earthly (6rth'li), a. [< ME. crthly, ertheli, eorthe-
ing way. Science, XII. 18.
eartheu'ware (^r'thn-wSr), «. Vessels or oth- li, -liche, -lie, < AS. eorthlic (= OHG. erdllh =
n. intrans. To retire underground ; burrow, er objects of clay (whether alone or mixed with loel. jardhligr), < eorthe, earth, -f -He, E. -lyi.]
as a hunted animal. other mineral substances) baked or fired in a 1. Pertaining to the earth or to this world;
Huntsmen tell us that a fox when escaped from the dogs, kiln, or more rarely sun-dried or otherwise pre- pertaining to the mundane state of existence
after a hard chase, always walks himself cool I)efore be pared without firing. The term is often restricted to as, earthly objects ; earthly residence.
earths. Bp. Ilorne, Essays and Thoughts. the coarser qualities, as distinguislied from porcelain and Eorthliche honeste thynges was offred thus at ones,
Hence foxes earthed, and wolves abhorred the day. stoneware and from terra-cotta. In this sense eartlienware Thorgh tlire kynde kynges kneolyng to lesu.
And hungry churles ensnared the nightly prey. njay be known from porcelain by its opacity, and from Piers Plowman (C), xxii. 94.
Tickelt, Hunting. stoneware by its porosity, wliich latter quality may be rec-
ognized by touching a fracture with tlie tongue, wlieu tlie "Wlian the bretheren of Gawein com thider ther be-gai>
earth2 (6rth), n. [E. dial., < earS, plow, + -//(, tongue will adhere to the porous earthenware, but not to the doell and sorowe so grete tliat noon erthly man niyght
noun-formative; early record is wanting, but stoneware. Earthenware may l)e eitlier miglazed, as Ijricks, devise noon gretter. Merlin (E. E. T. S.), ii. SCO.
card, q. v., in the sense of 'plowing' (OHG. art), ordinary flower-pots, etc., or enameled. See delf^, faience, Our earthly liou.se of this tabernacle. 2 Cor. v. 1.
majolica.
is nearly the same word.] If. The act of plow- 2. Belonging to the earth or world; worldly;
Earthenware is described as a soft, opaque material
ing a plowing.
;
formed of an earthy mixture, refractory, or liard to fuse,
carnal, as opposed to spiritual or heavenly;
Such land as ye break up for barley to sow, in the kiln. vile.
Two earths at the least, ere ye sow it, bestow. Wheatley and Delamotte, Art "Work in Earthenware, p. 1. How is he born in wliom we did knowe non erthely de-
Tusser, Husbandry. lyte. Merlin (E. E. T. S.), i. 1.
earth-fall (ferth'fal), n. [= OFries. irthfal, erth-
2. A day's plowing. Halliwell. [Prov. Eng.]
fel, erdfal =
G. erdfall, a sinking of the earth, Whose glory is in their shame, who mind earf Aii/ things*
things; low; groveling. Great grace that old man to him given had.
earth-board (ferth'bord), n. The board of a Such carthfed minds For God he often saw, from heaven hight.
plow that turns over the earth ; the mold-board. That never tasted the true heaven of love. All were his earthly eyen botli blunt and bad.
earth-borer (6rth'b6r"er), n. form of auger A B. Jonson. Spenser, F. Q.
for boring holes in the grotmd, in which the fine variety of A D. Being or originating on earth ; of all things
earth-flax (ferth'flaks), v.
twisted shank revolves inside a cylindrical box asbestos, with long, flexible, parallel filaments in the world; possible; conceivable: usedehief-
with a valve, which retains the earth till the resembling flax. Jy as an expletive.
tool is withdrawn. Also called earth-auger, earth-flea (Srth'fle), n. name of the chigoe, A What earthly benefit can be the result ? Pope.
earth-boring auger. See cut under auger. Sarco2>sy Ha penetrans : so called from its living It is passing strange that, during the long period of their
earth-born (er'th'bom), a. 1. Bom
of the in the earth. See cut under chigoe. education, the rising generation should never hear an
earth ; springing originally from the earth : as, earth-fly (erth'fll), n. Same as earth-flea. earthly syllalile about the constitution and administration
of their nation. Pop. Sci. Mo., XXVI. 29.
the fabled earth-born giants. earth-foam (crth'fom), n. Same as aphrite. = S3m. 1. Terrestrial, mundane, sublunary, etc. See world-
Creatures of other mould, earth-bom perhaps, earth-gall (erth'gal), n. [< ME. *erthe-galle, < ly.
Not spirits. Milton, P. L., Iv. S60. AS. eorth-gealla,X eorthe, earth, gealta, gall.] + earthly-minded (erth'li-min"ded), a. Having
2. Arising from or occasioned by earthly con- 1. A
plant of the gentian family, especially the a mind devoted to earthly things.
siderations. lesser centaury, Erythrwa Ceutaurium : so called earthly-mindedness (erth'li-min'ded-nes), n.
All earth-born cares are wrong. Goldsmith. from its bitterness. 2. In the United States, — Grossness ; sensuality ; devotion to earthly ob-
3. Of low birth ; meanly bom. the green hellebore, Veratrum viride. jects; earthliness.
the pressure of earth ; firmly fixed in the earth earth-house (erth'hous). n. [Sc. eird-, eard-, witliout eyes. Holland.
hence, figuratively, bound by earthly ties or in- yird-house (see eard, 2) ; < ME. erthhus, eorthhns, earth-moss (6rth'm6s), n. A book-name for a
terests. < AS. eorth-hus (= Icei. jardh-ltUs Dan. Jorrf- = moss of the genus Phascum.
Who can impress the forest; bid the tree
Unfix his earth-bound root?
hus =
G. erdhaus), a cave, den, < eorthe, earth, earthnut (erth'nut), n. [< ME. *erthnote, < AS.
'
Shak., Macbeth, iv. 1.
+ house.] The name generally given
has, eorth-nutu for *eorth-hnutu (=D. aardnoot Gt. =
earth-bred (ferth'bred), a. Low; groveling.
throughout Scotland to the underground struc- crdnuss =
Dan. jordiicid =
Sw.jordnot), < eorthe,
tures known as "Picts' houses" or "Plots' earth, +
7(»iwte, nut.] 1. The tuberous root of
Peaiiiints, I'll curb your headstrong impudence. dwellings." The e.arth-honse in its simplest form con- Bunium flexuosum and B. BuJbocastamtm, com-
And make you tremble when the lion roars,
Ye earthbred worms.
sists of a single irregular-shaped cliamlter, formed of un- mon
umbelliferous plants of Europe. See Bu-
A. Brewer (1), Lingua,
earth-chestnut (erth'ches"nut), n. The earth-
i. 6. hewn stones, the side walls gradually converging towaid
tlie top until tliey can be roofed by stones 4 or .5 feet in
nium. —
2. The groundnut, Arachis hypoga:a. —
width, the whole covered in by a mound of earth rising 3. The tuber of Cypcrus rotundiis and some
nut. slightly above the level of tlie suiTounding country. The other species of the same genus.
earth-closet (ferth'kloz'et), n. A night-stool, more advanced form has two or three chambers. Earth-
earth-oil (erth'oil), n. Same as j^etroleum.
or some convenience of that kind, in which the houses are fre(iuent in the northeast of Scotland, occa-
sionally thirty or forty being found in the same locality, earth-pea (erth'pe), «. See pea.
feces are received and covered by dry earth.
as in the Moor of Clova, Kildruminy, Aberdeenshire. earth-pig (<>rth'pig), n. Same as earth-hog.
earth-crab (erth'krab), w. An occasional name Querns, bones, deers' horns, plates of stone or slate, earth-pit (erth'pit), n. trench or pit, cover- A
of the mole-cricket, Gryllotalpa vulgaris. earthen vessels, cups and implements of bone, stone celts,
ed with glass, for protecting plants from frost.
earth-created (6rth'kre-a''ted), a. Formed of bronze swords, etc., are occasionally uncartliediu or near
earth. tlieni. Similar structures are found in Ireland. See earth-plate (erth'plat), n. In elect., a metallic
beehice houxe, under beehim. plate buried in the ground, forming the earth-
And an eternity, the date of gods,
Descended on poor earth-created man !
earth-inductor (6rth'in-duk"tor), n. In elect., connection of a telegraph-wire, lightning-con-
i'oung, Night Thoughts, ix. 220. a coil of wire arranged so as to be capable of ductor, or other electrical appliances.
:
earthpuff 1821
«loir bending and
show themselves by a Nor Is my flame
«arthpufft (erth'puf ), n A species of Lycoper- Earik-tillingg
unbending of tlie surface, so that a post stucl; in the So earthr/ as to need the dull material force
don; the puff ball. ground, vertical to begin with, does not remain vertical, Of eyes, or lips, or cheeks. Sir J. Denham,
Tuberes, mushrooms, tadstooles, earthturfes, earth- but inclines now to one side and now to another, the plane 5. In mineral., without luster, ordull, andrough-
of the ground in which it stands shifting relatively to the
pufftt.
Komerulator (15So).
horizon. Enojc. Bt-il., XXI. 626. —
ish to the touch. Earthy cobalt. See anbolan.^
earth-pulsation (crth'pul-sa*shon), ». A slow The popular name
Earthy fracture, a fracture wliich exjKjses a rough, dull
movement of the surface of the earth. earth-tongue
(ertU'tung), «. surface, with minute elevations .tnd depressions, cliarac-
wave-like given to elub-shaped fungi of the genus Geo- — teristic of some minerals. Earthy manganese. See
Such movements, in general, escape attention glossum, fouml in lawns and gi-assy pastures.
on account of their long period.
earth-treatment (erth'tret'ment), ». A meth- ear-trumpet (er'trum'pet), n. An apparatus
earthquake (erth'kwak), n. [< ME. erthcqicakc, od of treating wounds with clay (or clayey for collecting sound-waves and conveying them
< crtlu; eartli, + quake, quake. The AS. words earth) dried and finely powdered. It is applied to to the ear, used chiefly by the deaf. Tlie most
were tortU-hifnng, -heofung (bifung, trembling), the
metallic tube having a flaring
wound as a deodorizing agent, tending at, the same common form is a simple
or Ijell-shaped mouth for collecting the waves of sound,
eorth-ditne (dyne, din), eortlistyriing {stynoig, time to prevent or arrest putrefaction. Thomas, Med.
and a smaller end or ear-piece which is inserted in the
etirrin^), eortlistyrennis. _ Cf. eartli-din.'] Amove- Diet.
menroVvibraHon'of'a part oif the earth's crust, earth-tremor (erth'trem'or), n. A minute ear.
ear-wax (er'waks), )(. Cerumen.
Such niiivenienu are of every degree of violence, from movement of the surface of the earth, resem-
earwig (er'wig), «. [= E. dial, earwike, ear-
those that are scarcely jKjrceptible without the aid of bljng an earthquake in rapidity of oscillation,
apparatiu specially contrived for the purpose to those ^^^
tcrig, ycrritcig, erritriggle, etc., < cncygge, ME.
accotmt of its small amplitude requir- crewygge, ycncygge, < AS. edruicga, also once
which overthrow buiUtmgs, rend the ground asunder,
thousands liiman The duration of mg
•
instrumental
.
* i
means *for its „
*„ detection,
j^t„„t;„„
and destroy of lives. improp. coricicga, earwig (translating L. blatta),
earthquakes is as variable as their iuU'nsity. .Sometimes earthward, earthwarOS (erth ward, -wamz), < cdre, ear, -I- Kicga, a rare word, occumng but
tliere is a single shoclf, lasting only a second or two ; at „,^j, U. cartlt^ + -Karil, -wafds.l Toward the
other times a great numlier of shocks occur in succes- p~-»i, once (Leechdoms, ii. 134, 1. 4, translated ear-
cai u.
aion, si'paratcd by greater or less iutenals of time, the ,. ., , . t 7 » :.« used
.
..„«,i wig'), appar. a general term for an insect, lit.
earth not being reduced to complete quiescence for weeks earth- Wire (erth Wir), n. In elect., a -wire
a moving creature, allied to wicg, a horse, uHht,
or even months. It is not known that any portion of the for joining conductors with the earth especial- :
a creature, a B'ight, < wegan, tr. bear, carry,
earth's surface is entirely exempt frttm earthquakes but
there are large areas where no very destructive ones have
;
ly applied to wires placed upon telegraph-poles
for the purpose of conveying the leakage from
intr. move, > E. weigh: see weigh, icight^. —
ever occurred, either in the memory of man or as re- Many languages give a name
corded in history. The region* most frequently visited the line to the earth, thus preventing interfer-
to this insect indicating a be-
by destmctive shocks are those where active volcanoes ence by ^ "" ^ from one line to another.
leakage lief that it is prone to creep
exist, those near high mountain-ranges, acid those where earthw'olf f^rtll'wulf ), n The aardwolf. See
the rocks are of recent geological age, and are much dis- |>,. "T,)*, , ^ into the human ear D. oor- :
turbed or uplifted. Such regions are the vicinity of the ^iri'"''' , ..., , .,, worm =
G. ohruurni, ear-
Mediterranean, the shores of the Pacific and the adjacent earthWOrK (erth werK), n. [< ME. *er<7i«fcrt, < worm; G. o7ir6o/irer, 'ear-bor-
isUmU, the neighlMrhood of the Alpa, and the East India AS. eorthwcore (= D. aardtcerk = G. erdvoerk = er'; Sw. ormask, ear-worm;
islands. Regions not liable to seismic disturbances are Dan. jordvcerk), < eorthe, earth, -I- xceorc, work
the whole of northeastern North America, the east side D&n.ormitvist, 'ear-twister';
of South America, the north of Asia, and a large part see cnrt/il and work.'] 1. In engin., any opera-
F. perce-oreille, Pg. fura-
of Africa. An earthquake-shock is a wave-like n>otion of tion in which earth is removetl or thrown up, orcWoa,' pierce-ear'; Sp.j/ii-
a part of the earth's crust, and. In the words of Hum-
boldt, is one of the wars in which the reaction of the in-
as in cuttings, embankments, etc. 2. In fort,, — sano del oitio. It. I'erme auri-
terior of the earth against ttt exterior makes itself mani-
any oflfensive or defensive construction formed eolare, ear-worm, etc.] 1.
The most destmctive earthquake of which we have chieflyof earth: commonlyintheplural. Hence The popular English name of
fest.
any knowledge was that of Lisbon. Itbegan .November 1st, — 3. Any
similar construction, as the ancient
all the cursorial orthopterous
1756, and was felt over that part of the earth s surface in- of earth found In various parts of the
mounds
cluded between Iceland on the north, Mogatlor in -Moroc- insects of the family Forji-
co on the south, Tdplitx in hohemia on the east, and the
United States, of unknown use and origin. culidtv, representing the sub-
West India Islands on the west. The destruction of life They differ widely in form, but are always well order ii'«;>»exo/jtera, which has
and property occasioned by this shock was very great. defined in plan, and sometimes inclose largo several genera and numer-
The disturbance continued, especially in the vicinity of areas. Earwig \,Spcnp>phora
the Mediterranean, with short intermissions, for several ous species. There is a iwpular brunnnpeHMU). (Lioe
Anyhow, there the mound Is, an earthwork which, if notion that these insects creep into
months. On November 18th, 1755, the moet violent shock stiows natural size.)
artiOcial It be, the Lady of the Mercians hetaelt need Dot theearand cause injur>' to it. They
occurred which has been felt in New England since its
bare been ashamed oL Ji. A. Freeman, Venice, p. SO.
settlement by the whites. (Jne of the moet destructive are mostly nocturnal and |>hytophngou8, though some are
earthquakes of recent occurrence was that which took earthwomi (ferth'w^rm), «. [= D. aardworm carnlvoi-tms. They have filiform, innuy-joluted antennae,
u ....... v-„,„ ,..,„.^,.. ,.v, short, vcinless, leatllery ui»per wings, under wings folded
place 00 the island of lachla near Naples, July 28th, ISiCl,
by which over 2,000 persons perished. By the earthquake
^(j „.rf„„rm;<ear(/ii icorm.] l.Thecom- + Iwth lengthwise and crosswise, anal forceps, and no ocelli.
at Menilosa, South America, on the 20th of ilarrb, 18<!1, mon name of the worms of the family Lutnbri- The common earwig is Forjicuta atn-iculari^ ; the great
orer 12,000 persons lost their lives. A violent earthtiuake, cidte (which see), and especially of the genus earwig is LabiUura gigantea; the little earwig is Labia
most destmctive in Charleston, South Carolina, and vicin- LumhriCM, of which there are several species, minor. Another species Is Sponpophora brtimieijjenmg.
ity, occurred on the night of August 3Ut, 1886. See teU-
one of the best-known being L. terrestris. They 2. In the United States, the common name of
snie, teumomeler, and coieaitistn.
belong to the order of ollgocha'tous annelids. The earth- any of the small centipeds, such as are found
Whan the Jewes liadden made the Temple, com an worm has a cylindric vermiform iHxly, tapering at both
Enhe ntiakena, and cast It doun (a* God wolde) and de- ends, segmented into a great numlier of rings, destitute of
in houses in most of the States. —
3t. One who
gains the ear of another by stealth and whis-
}ed alle that the! bad made.
stroje legs, eyea, or any appendages visilile on ordinary inspec-
Mtttuterille, Travels, p. 84. tion. It mores by the contraction of the successive seg-
pers insinuations; a prying informer ; a whis-
ments of tlie body, aided by rows of bristles which are ca- perer.
the yle ys sor trobled with the seyd erth^ qw^ke
.'til
retracted. It is hermaphrodite, each indi-
i
mammals, and other animals, and their value for bait is judice by covert statements.
earth-shine (irth'shin), ». [< earth^ thine. + well known to the angler, whence they are often called
He was so sure to lie eannigged In private that what ho
Cf. moontihine, sunshine, starshine.'] In astron., anfjUworms or JiMhwontu. These worms are mostly a few
inchea long, iMit there are species attaining a length of a heard or said openly went for little.
the faint light visible on the part of the moon yard or more. Marryat, Snarleyj'ow.
not illuminated by the sun. it is due to the light The people who Inhabit the highlands of Southern Bra- l^p early and down late, for he was nothing of a slug-
which the earth reflects on the moon, and Is m«rat con- zil luive a firm Itelief iti the existence of a gigantic earth- gard : daily ear-wigging influential men, for he was a mas-
splcuoiu soon after new mo«m, when the sun-illuminated wrtH fifty yards or more in length, five In breadth, cov- ter of ingratintion.
part of the disk is smallest. This phenomenon is popularly ered with hones as with acoat-of-mail, and of such strength K. L. Steventon, A College Magazine, 11.
descriljed as "the old moon in the new moon's arms." as to be able to uproot great pine-trees as thouuli they
ear-'witness (er'wit'nes), ji. 1. One who is
earth-smoke (irth'smok), n. [A translation were blades of grasa, ana to throw up such quantities of
clay In making its way underground as to dam up streams able to give testimony to a fact from his own
of L. fumus terra: fumus, smoke; terra, gen.
and illvert them into new courses. This redoubtable hearing.
of ferra, earth: see fumitory and terrestrial.'] monster is known as the "Minhocao." An ear-witneee of all the passages Ijetwixt them. Fuller.
The plant fumitory, Fumaria officinalis. Pop. seL Mo., GOe. xm. eye-witness and earwitneti of that which
Dante is tlie
earth-star (<-rth'stSr), n. [A translation of 2. Figuratively, a mean, sordid wretch. he relates. Macanlay, Milton.
deaitcr.] A fungns of the genus (lea^ter; a Thy vnin contempt, dull earthwortti, cease. Sorrie.
2. A mediate w^itness; one who testifies to
kind of puffball having 8 double peridium, the A
niiterlayerof which breaksintosefpientswhich """""'"'•"r-f'v
earthworm-oil (6rth'w6rm-oil),
. " n. . greenish
" what he has received upon the testimony of
obtained from earthworms, used as a rem Hamilton.
ecome reflezed, forming a star-like structure oil edv for earache.
others.
Sams as 6oH-icomi.
ear-worm (er'w6rm), ti. 1.
-ibont the base of 4he fungns.
earthy (^r'thi), n. [< earfAi
earth-stopper (frth'stop'tr), n. In hunting, pertaining to earth; consisting of earth; par-
-yi.] 1. Ofor + — 2t. A secret counselor.
There is nothing In the oath to protect such an ear-
one who stops up the earths of foxes to i)roveut taking of the nature of earth; terrene: as, worm, but he may Ije appeached.
t!ieir escape.
earthy matter. 2. Kesembling earth or some — Bp. Uacket, Life of Abp. Williams, II. 152.
The eartk-ttopper is an important functionary In conn- of the properties of earth : as, an earthy taste earwort (er'w^rt), «. The liachicallis rupestris,
ies where there are many eartlis. F.ncijc. Dril., XII. 385.
; ]
or smell. a low rubiaceous shrub of the West Indies.
earth-table (^^rth'ti'bl), n. In arch., a project- And catch the heavy earthy scents ease (ez), n. [Early mod. E. also eaze, ese; <
That blow from summer shores. AF. me, OF.
ing course or plinth restintr inunediately upon T. B. Atdrich, PIscataqna River.
ME. ese, else, eyse, < aise, ayse,
the foundations. Also called grass-table and
St. Inhabiting the earth ; earthly.
aize, F. aise, f., = Pr. aise, ais (> prob. Basque
ground-table. See ledgment-tabU. Those earthy spirits black and envious are ;
aisia) = OCat. aise, ease, =
Pg. aeo, aid, mo-
earth-tilting (ferth'til'ting), n. slight move- A 1 11 call up other gods of form more fair.
tive, occasion, =OIt. asio, agio, aggio, m., ease,
ment or displacement of the surface of the Drydeti, Indian Emperor, convenience, exchange, premium, now distin-
ad in some fonns of earthquake. 4. Gross ; not refined. guished in spelling: agio, eaae; aggio OF, agio,
; ! ;: — ;
And that shall lend a kind of easiness horse, saxo-horse, saio-buck, F. chevalet, Sp. caba-
adhais, leisure, ease. There is nothing to prove To the next abstinence. Shak., Hamlet, iii. 4.
llete, Pe. cavallete de pintor. It. cavalletto, an
a connection with (2) AS. edthe, obs. E. eath He change<l his faitll and his allegiance two or three
(see eath); or with (3) Goth, azets, easy (in times, with a facility tliat evinced the looseness of liis
easel, clothes-horse, etc.] A
frame in the form
of a tripod for supporting a blackboard, paper,
compar. azetizo), azeti, ease, azetaba, easily ; or principles. irein^j, Sketch-Book, p. 362.
or canvas in drawing and painting also, a sim- ;
with (4) L. otiuiit, ease (see otiose) ; or with (5) ease (ez), v. t.; pret. and pp. eased, ppr. easing. [<
ilar frame used as a rest for portfolios, large
OHG. essa, MHG. G. esse (> Dan. esse), a forge, ME. esen, eisen, < OF. *eiser, aiser, aisier=iPT. ai-
furnace, chimney, orig. a fireplace (akin to sar Pg. azar It. agiare, ease from the noun.
] = = j
books, etc —
Easel-picture, easel-piece, (a) a mov-
able picture painted on an easel, as distinguished from a
AS. dd, a funeral pyre, dst, a furnace, kiln, > 1 To relieve or free from pain or bodily dis- . painting on a wall, ceiling, etc. (b) A picture small enough
E. oast, q. v.), whence, as some conjecture, quiet or annoyance; give rest or relief to; make to be placed on an easel for exhibition after completion.
'to be at one's ease' (F. ^tre A son aise), orig. comfortable. easeP (e'sl), adv. [Sc, also written eassel,
'to be at one's hearth, feel at home' or with ; eastle, eastilt, appai-. variations of eastlin, 'east-
Ther thei rested and esed hem Ithemselves] in the town
(6) MLG. esse G. esse = =
ODan. esse, Dan. es as thei that ther-to hadde grete nede. ling, adv., easterly: see eastling. For the form,
= Sw. esse, well-being, comfort, ease (appar. Merlin (E. E. T. S.), ii. 172. cf. deasil.'] Eastward.
< L. esse, be, used as a noun) : unless indeed Heaven, I hope, will ease me I am sick. :
Ow, man ! ye should hae hadden eassel to Kippeltringan.
these last Teut. forms are, like the E.word, from Beau, and Fl., Philaster, iv. 3. Scott, Guy Mannering, L
the F. aise.^ 1. An undisturbed state of the The longer they live the worse they are, and death easeless (ez'les), a. [< ease + -less.l Want-
body freedom from labor, pain, or
; physical an- alone must ease them. Burton, Anat. of Mel., p. 262. ing ease ; lacking in ease. [Eare.]
noyance of any kind; tranquil rest; physical Thou mayest rejoice in the mansion of rest, because, by Send me some tokens, that my hope may live,
comfort: as, he sits at his ease; to taike one's thy means, many living persons are eased or advantaged. Or that my easeless thoughts may sleep and rest.
ease. Jer. Taylor, Holy Dying, iv. 9. Donne, The Token.
Be comfortable to thy friends, and to thyselfe wish ectse. I ceaselesse, easelesse pri'd about
2. To free from anxiety, mental dis- care, or
In every nook, furious to flnde her out.
Babees Book (E. E. T. S.), p. 99.
turbance as, the late news has eased my mind.
:
Vicars, tr. of Virgil (1632).
Soul, . . . talse thine ease, eat, drink, and be merry.
Luke xii. 19, Now first I find easement (ez'ment), «. [< ME. esement, eyse-
Mine eyes true opening, and my heart much eased. ment, < OF. aisement (= Pr. aizimen), < aiser,
How blest is he who crowns, in shades like these,
Milton, P. L., xii. 274.
A youth of labour with an age of ease ! ease see ease and -ment.] 1. That which gives :
Goldsjnith, Des. Vil., 1. 99. 3. To release from pressure or tension; les- ease, relief, or assistance convenience ac- ; ;
Better the toil . . .
sen or moderate the tension, tightness, weight,
Than waking dream and slothful ease. commodation.
Whittier, Seed-time and Harvest. closeness, speed, etc., of, as by slacking, lift- Thei ben fulle grete Schipppes, and faire, and wel or-
ing slightly, shifting a little, etc.: sometimes deyned, and made with Halles and Chambres, and other
2. Aquiet state of the mind; freedom from
with off: as, to ease a ship in a seaway by put- eysementes as thoughe it were on the Lond.
concern, anxiety, solicitude, or anything that Mandeville, Travels, p. 214.
ting down the helm, or by throwing some cargo
frets or rafles the mind ; tranquillity. Here they of force (as fortune now did fall)
overboard; to ease a bar or a nut in machinery.
And Gonnore hym praide soone to come a-gein, "ffor Compelled were themselves awhile to rest.
neuer," quod [she], sliall I be in ese of herte vn-to the
'* O ease your hand
treat not so hard your slave
! Glad of that easement, though it were but small.
tyme chat I yow se a-gein." Merlin (E. E. T. S.), it 360. Sir P. Sidney (Arber's Eng. Garner, I. 546). Spenser, F. Q., VI. iv. 15.
Oh, did he light upon you ? what, he would have had you There may be times no doubt when the pressure by He has the advantage of a free lodging, and some other
seek for ea«e at the hands of Mr. Legality ? Russia upon ourselves in India may be eased offhy a dex- easements. Swift
Bunyan, Pilgrim's Progress, p. 100. terous diplomatic use of European alliances and compli-
cations. Fortnightly liev., N. S., XLIII. 7. 2. In law, a right of accommodation in ano-
Like a coy maiden, Ease, when courted most, ther's land; such a right in respect to lands
Farthest retires —
an idol, at whose shrine 4. To relieve, as by the removal of a burden or as that of passage, or of having free access of
Who oft'nest sacrifice are favor'd least.
Cowper, Task, i. 409. an encumbrance ; remove from, as a burden
with of before the thing removed as, to ease a
light and air —
which does not involve taking
Hence —
3t. Comfort afforded or provided; sat- porter of his load.
:
anything from the land ; more specifically, such
a right when held in respect to one piece of
isfaction; relief; entertainment; accommoda-
The childeren hem vn-armed and wente to theire log- land by the owner of a neighboring piece by
tion. gyngis, and hem esed of all thinge that to mannys body virtue of his ownership of the latter. In refer-
But for the love of God they him bisoght belongeth. Merlin (E. E. T. S.), ii. 271.
ence to this latter piece, the right is termed an easement;
Of herberwe [harl)orage] and of ese as for hir peny.
me
Chaucer, Reeve's Tale, 1. 199.
Will no man ease of this fool? in reference to the former it is termed a servitude : but by
Beau, and Fl., Laws of Candy, ii. 1. some writers these terms are used indiscriminately. Ease-
It is an ease to your friends abroad that you are more and please myself ment, as distinguished from licetise, implies an interest in
now it were an in- I'll ease you o/ that care, in 't.
a man of business than heretofore for ;
Middleton, Chaste Maid, the servient tenement itself.
ii. 2.
jury to trouble you with a busy letter. 3. In carp., same as ea«e-o_^._ Apparent ease-
Doniie, Letters, xxxi. He was not gone far, after his arrival, but the cavaliers
ment, an easement ** of such a nature that it may be seen
A principal fruit of friendship is .the ease and discharge met him and eased him of his money.
or known on a careful inspection by a person ordinarily
Winthrop, Hist. New England, II. 119.
of the fulness of the heart, which passions of all kinds do conversant with the subject" (L. A. Goodeve).
cause and induce. Bacon, Friendship (ed. 1887). Sir Thomas Smythe, having reluctantly professed a wish ease-off (ez'of), n. In carp., etc., a curve or
to be eased of his office, was dismissed. easy transition formed at the junction of two
It is an ease, Malfato, to disburthen
Bancroft, Hist. U. S., I. 118.
Our souls of secret clogs. pieces, moldings, etc., which would otherwise
Ford, Lady's Trial, i. 3. 5. To mitigate; alleviate; assuage; allay; meet at an angle, as at the junction of the wall-
4. Facility; freedom from difficulty or great aljate or remove in part, as any burden, pain, string of a flight of stairs with the base-board
labor: as, it can be done with great ease. grief, anxiety, or disturbance. of the wall, either above or below.
"When you please, 'tis done with ease. Sound advice might ease hir wearie thoughtes. easily (e'zi-li), adv. [< ME. esily, esehj, esiliclie;
Bobin Hood and the Golden .4rrow (Child's Ballads, V. 387). Gascoigne, Steele Glas (ed. Arber), p. 52. < easy -hfi.'] In an easy manner +
with ease ;
Lamenting is altogether contrary to reioysing, euery ^ofle thou somewhat thegrievousservitudeof thy father. without difficulty, pain, labor, anxiety, etc.;
man saith so, and yet is it a peece of ioy to be able to la- 2 Chron. x. 4.
smoothly; quietly; tranquilly: as, a task easily
ment with ease. Puttenham, Arte of Eng. Poesie, p. 37. Strong fevers are not eas'd performed ; an event easily foreseen ; to pass
The Mob of Gentlemen who wrote with ease. With counsel,, but with best receipts and means.
Ford, Broken Heart, ii. 2. life easily ; the carriage moves easily.
Pope, Imit. of Horace, II. i. 108.
There may sweet music ease thy pain Than meveth on monday two houres be-fore day, and
6. Freedom from stiffness, constraint, or for- .
ease) or of negation (ill at ease, formerly sometimes evil on Flying, and over lands, with mutual wing Not soon provoked, she easily forgives. Prior.
ease, ME. eoele an eyse).
Easing their fliglit. Milton, P. L,, vii. 428.
easiness (e'zi-nes), «. 1. The state of being
His soul shall dwell at ease. Pa. xxv. 13. Ease her the command given to reduce the speed of a
!
steamer's engine, generally preparatory to the command easy ; the act of imparting or the state of en-
Ther I was well at ese, ffor ther was no thyng that
Desyred to have but I had it shortly.
I to "stopher,"or "turn astern." —
To ease away (»«w^), joying ease , restfulness : as, the easiness of a
to slack gi-adually, as the fall of a tackle. — To ease the vehicle ; the easiness of a seat.
Torkington, Diarie of Eng. Travell, p. 7.
helm. See hebn^. = Ssti. 2. To quiet, calm, tranquilize, I think the reason I have assigned hath a great interest
I am very ill at ease. still, pacify. —
4. 'I'o disburden, disencumber.
in that rest and easiness we enjoy when asleep. Bay.
Unfit for mine own purposes. easeful (ez'fiil), a. [< ea,^e -fid.'] Attended +
Shak., Othello, iii. 3.
by or affording ease; promoting rest or com- 2. Freedom from difficulty; ease of perform-
At one's ease, comfortal)le free from stiffness or formal- ; fort; quiet; peaceful; restful.
ance or accomplishment : as, the easiness of an
ity— Cliapel of ease. See chapel. —little ease, a cell undertaking.
much t4M> small for a prisoner, used as a torture in the To himself, he doth your gifts apply
As his main force, choice sport, and easeful stay. Easiness and difflcnlty are relative terms. Tillotson.
reign of Elizabeth. = Syn. 1- Qaiet, Tranquillity, etc. See
rest. —
i, Kase.Katdness, Facility. (Seerrarfi'ne««.) In con-
Sir P. Sidney (Arber's Eng. Garner, 1. 524),
3. Flexibility; readiness to comply; prompt
nection with tasks of any sort, ease is subjective, and de- I spy a black, suspicious, threat'ning cloud. compliance ; a yielding or disposition to yield
notes freedom from labor, or the power of doing things That will encounter with our glorious sun.
^vithout seeming effort as, he reatis with ease. Easiness
: Ere he attain ilia eas^xU western bed. without opposition or reluctance: as, easiness
U ia this connection generally objective, characterizing Shak., 3 Heu. Yl., v. 3. of temper.
; : : ;
used adverbially (never otherwise as a noun, c is the remainder after the division of N
by 7,
and never as an adj., the forms so given in the church in the Western Empire: as, the great d is the remainder after the division of 19a -f a; by 30.
dictionaries being simply the adv. (east or east- schism between East and W est. e is the remainder after the
by 7.
division of 26 -H 4c -I- 6d -(- y
«H), alone or in comp.), to the east, in the east, It is idle to keep (as controversialists, and especially
east; in comp. edst- (est-, eest-, etc.), a quasi- Anglo-Roman controversialiata, love to keep) the East in Tliird, then d
-I-
« -1- 22
the day of JIarch, or d + «
is 9 ia —
the background. J. M. HetUe, Eastern Church, i. 16. the day of April on whicli Easter falls, except that when
adj., as in edst-dal, the eastern region, the east, this rule gives April 26th the true day is April 19th, and
ete. (> E. east, a.) O. cost
; = IMes. east, = 6. The east wind. when the rule gives April 25th, if d = 28 and a > 10, then
aest =
LG. oosi, G. ost Sw. ost =
Dan. ost, = The dreaded Eat la all the wind that blows. the true date is .-Vpril 18th.
ost, east (as a noun, in other than adverbial use Pope, K. of the L., iv. Sa H. a. Of or pertaining to Easter.
all modem, and developed from the older ad- -
As when a field of com It were much to be wished that their easter devo- . . .
verbial uses) (cf. OF. est, hest, F. est 8p. Pg. = Bows ears before the roaring East.
all its
Tennyson, Princess, 1.
tions would, in some measure, come up to their easter
South, Works, II. viii.
este, Sp. Pg. also with the def. art., teste It. = Empire of the East. See emfire.
dress.
est, from the E.): (1) AS. edst D. oost = = n. a. [< ME. est-, eest-, eest-, east-, < AS. east-,
At Easter pricei, at a cheap rate, flesh being formerly
then at a discount^ Wright. Easter d&y, the day on —
Dan. ost, adv., to the east, in the east, east ; (2) only in comp., being the adv. (orig. noim) so which the festival of Easter is celebrated.
AS. edstan, edsten, esten =
OS. ostan, ostana = used: seeetuf, n.] 1. Situated in the direction But O, she dances such a way
OFries. aesta, dsta, Fries, asta I£LO. ostene, = of the rising sun, or toward the point where the No sun upon an Easter.day
t
osten =
OHO. ostana, MHO. ostene, osten, G. sun rises when in the equinoctial : as, the east Is half s<» a sight.
fine
osten =
Icel. austan, adv., prop, 'from the east side; an east window.
Suckling, Ballad upon a Wedding.
(hither),' but in MHG. and G. also 'in the Easter dues or olferlnSS, in the Ch. of Eng., certain
Tills evening, on the east side of the grove.
east, east'; hence the noon, D. oosten MLG. = Shak., 2 Hen. VI., ii 1.
dues paid to the paKH'hial clergy by the parishioners at
Easter as a compensation for personal tithes, or as the
osten =
OHG. ostan, MHO. osten, 0. osten Sw. = tithe for personal lalior.— Easter eggs, eggs, real or ar-
ostan =
Dan. iisten, the oast ; (3) AS. 'edstor (not 2. Coming from the direction of the east : only tificial, ornamented by dyeing, piiititiiig, or otherwise, and
found, but perhaps the orig. form of edst), ilE. in the phrase the or an east wind. usetl at Easter as decorations or gifts.
austr, adv., to the east, east, Sw. Dan. Icel. also of the altar or high altar of a church as seen tion. an<l they color the eggs red in allusion to the blood
as noun, the east; (4) AS. edateme, adj., E. east- from the nave : as, the east end of the choir- of their redemption. Brewer.
ern, q. v. ; (5) AS. edstweard, edsteweard, £. east- stalls. Easter eve (sometimes Easter axn), the day before Easter
ward, q. V. These are all formed from an orig. Abbreviated E. Sunday Holy Saturday the end of Lent and the prelude ; ;
also nit. Or. ^/mp, orig. 'Fta/tap, day, lap, orig. yond the altar as seen from the nave as, the the vigil, the eve of Easter. Donne, Sermons, xii.
'Ftaap, =
L. ver, orig. 'veser, spring (> ult. E. chapel e4ist of the choir is commonly called the
:
aureus, or*, etc.). Cf. vest, north, south, and manner. BartUtt. (Slang, New Eng. — Down east. See of April and continuing till about the 8th of May. (&) In
)
northeast, southeast.'] I. n. 1. One of the four (fownS, ade. the English universities, a term held in the spring and
cardinal points of the compass, opposite to the east (est), v. i. [< east, n. and adv.'] To move lasting for alxiut six weeks after Easter.— Easter weelL
the week following Easter, the days of which are callea
west, and lying on the right band when one toward the east turn or veer toward the east. ;
Easter Monday, Easter Tuesday, etc.
faces the north ; the point in the heavens where [Scarcely used except in the verbal noun east- easter^t (es'tfer), a. [< ME. ester- (in comp.), <
the sun is seen to rise at the equinox, or the cor- ing.] AS. 'eastor OS. ostar, etc., adv., east: see =
responding point on the earth, strictly, the term east-abont (est'a-bouf), adv. Around toward ea.H, n., and cf. eastern, easterly, easterling, from
appliflt to the one point where the sun rises at the equi- the east; in an easterly direction. which easter, a., is in part developed.] Eastern
nox but originally and in general use It refcn to the gcn-
;
osterlink =
G. osterling) ; < caster- (see east, n. as well as Catholics, profess to receive them [Cln-istian great obstacles; not burdensome: as, an easy
and a., easier^) +
-Ung^.l I. n. 1. native A dogmas] on ecclesiastical authority.
H. y. Oxenham, Short Studies, p. 325.
task; an easy question; an easy road.
of some country lying eastward of another; an This sikcues is righte easy to endure;
Oriental: formerly applied in England to the easterner (es'ter-nSr), n. [< eastern -erl.] + But fewe puple it causith for to dye.
Hanse merchants and to traders in general from A person from the eastern United States. Political Poetns, etc. (ed. Furnivall), p. 61.
parts of Germany and from the shores of the [Colloq.,U. S.] My yoke is easy, and my burden is light. Mat. xi. 30,
Baltic. The bulk of the cowboys themselves are South-western- 'Tis as easy as lying. Shak,, Hamlet, iii. 2.
Having oft in l)atteill vanquished ers. . The best hands are fairly bred to the work and
. . At with easy roads, he came to Leicester.
last,
Those spoylefull Picts, and swarming Easterlings. followit from their youth up. Nothing can be more fool- Shak., Hen. VIII., iv. 2.
Spenser, F. Q., H. x. 63. ish than for an Easterner to think he can become a cow-
It is much easier to govern great masses of men through
Merchants of Norway, Denmarlt, called Easier- boy in a few months' time. their imagination than througli their reason.
T. Roosevelt, The Century, XXXV. Kii.
. . .
lings. Hotinnhed, Ireland, an. 430. Lecky, Enrop. Morals, II. 287.
The merchants of the East-Land parts of Alniain or easternmost (es'tfem-most), a. superl. [< east- 3. Giving no pain, shock, or discomfort: as, aa
High Germany well known in former times by the name ern + -most.'] Most eastern; situated in the easy posture an easy carriage an easy trot.
; ;
of Easterlings, Fuller, Worthies, xxiv. point furthest east.
wiping his face on the jack-towel, remarked,
!Mr. Bailey,
most likely the Easterliiigs did preserve a record
It is Eastertide (es'ter-tid), m. Eastertime; either
of many words and actions of the holy Jesus, which are
"that arter late hours nothing freshened up a man so
the week ushered in by and following Easter, much as an easy shave."
not transmitted to us.
formerly observed throughout the Christian Dickens, Martin Chuzzlewit, xxix.
Jer. Taylor, Works (ed. IS.^), I. 138.
.
world as a holiday and with religious services, 4. Moderate; not pressing or straining; not ex-
2. The name given to the English silver i)en-
or the fifty days between Easter and Whitsun- acting; indulgent: as, a ship imder easy sail;
nies (also called sterlings) of the twelfth, thir- tide, which were observed as a festival and with
teenth, and fourteenth centuries also to Euro-
an easy master.
pean imitations of the same. See sterling.
;
erly wind; an easterly rain. eas'tland (est'land), n. and a. [< ME. eestlond, 6. Not constrained ; not stiff, formal, or harsh
estlond, eastlond, < AS. edstland, < edst, adv., facile ; natural : as, easy manners ; an easy ad-
The winter winds still easterly do keep.
And with keen frosts have chained up the deep. east, +
land, land.] I. n. The land in the dress ; an easy style of writing.
Drayton, On his Lady not coming to London. east; eastern countries ; the Orient. [Rare.] There is no man more hospitably easy to be withall
On II.+ a. Eastward-bound; being engaged in than my Lord Arlington. Evelyn, Diary, Oct. 16, 1671.
easterly (es't6r-li), adv. [< easterly, a.]
the east ; in the direction of east. the eastern trade. Good manners is the art of making those people easy
Our own eight East India ships . . . and our eastland with whom we converse. Sicift, Good Planners.
There seem to have been two adjacent but separate tor-
fleet, to tlie number of twenty. Boyle, Works, VI. 192. His version is not indeed very east/ or elegant; but it is
nadoes, moving easterly about sixty miles an hour.
entitled to the praise of clearness and fidelity.
Science, III. 801. eastling (est'ling), a. [Se. eastlin; < east + Macaulay, Milton.
easter-mackerel (es'tfer-mak'e-rel), n. Same -Ung^. Cf. hackling, headling, etc. See easel^.]
Dryden was the first Englishman who wrote perfectly
as chub-mackerel. Easterly. easy prose, and he owed his style and turn of thought to
eastern (es'tfem), a. and n. [< ME. esterne, How do you, this blae eastlin wind, his French reading.
OHG. = That's like to blaw a body blind ? Lowell, Among my Books, 1st ser., p. 340.
CBsterne, < AS. edsterne (= OS. ostroni Burns, To James Tennant.
ostroni =
Icel. austrann, eastern), < "edstor, 7. Easeful; self-indulgent.
edst = OS. ostar, etc., east: see east,n. and a. east'Ward (est'ward), adv. [< ME. estward, <
Our Blessed Saviour represents in the Paraoie vhls young
Cf. western, northern, southern.'] I, a. 1. Situ-
AS. edstweard, edsteweard, adv., < edst, adv., Prodigal as weary of being rich and easie at Home and
ated toward the east or on the part toward the east, +
-weard, -ward.] Toward the east; in fond of seeing the Pleasures of the World.
«ast: as, the eastern side of a town or church;
the direction of east: as, to travel eastward; Stillinyjieet, Sermons, III. L
the eastern shore of a bay. the Dead Sea lies eastward of Jerusalem. The easy. Epicurean life which he [Frederic] had led,
Haste hither. Eve, and with thy sight behold, his love of good cookery and good wine, of music, of con-
Kight against the eastern gate, Eastward among those trees, what glorious shape versation, of light literature, led many to regard him as a
"Where the great sun begins his state. sensual and Intellectual voluptuary.
Milton, L' Allegro,
Comes this way moving. Milton, P. L., v. 309.
1. 59. Macaulay, Frederic the Great.
While more eastward they direct the prow,
2. Going toward the east, or in the direction Enormous waves the quivering deck o'erflow. 8t. Light; sparing; frugal.
of east as, an eastern route.
: 3. Coming from — Falconer, Shipwreck, iii.
And 3it he was but esy of dispence
the east easterly. [Rare.]
;
east'Ward (est'ward), a. [(.eastward, adv.'] 1. He kepte that he wan in pestilence.
Having a direction toward the east. Chaucer, Gen. Prol. to C. T., 441.
I woo'd a woman once.
1.
But she was sharper than an eastern wind. The eastward extension of this vast tract was unknown. 9t. Indifferent; of rather poor quality.
Tennyson, Audley Court. Marsden, tr. of Marco Polo.
The maister of the feast had set vpon the table wine
4. Of or pertaining to the east Oriental being ; ;
2. Bearing toward the east ; deviating or tend- that was but eoi^ie and so-so.
or occurring in the east as, eastern countries
:
ing in the direction of the east : as, the eastward J. Udall, tr. of Apophthegms of Erasmus, p. .^48.
eastern manners ; an eastern tour. trend of the mountains Eastward position (cc- 10. In com., not straitened or restricted, or dif-
The easteme churches first did Christ embrace. cles.), the position of the celebrant at tlie eucharist, when ficult to obtain or manage : opposed to tigh t
Stirling, Doomesday, The Ninth Houre. he stands in front of tlie altar and facing it used with
as, the money-market is easy (that is, loans
:
<ier Greek). — Eastern crown, in her., same as antifiue contention between two parties, there seems to be no
adv. gen. -s.] Eastward. advantage on either side. [U. S.] = Syn. 1. Untroubled,
crown (which see, under antique). — Eastern Empire.
See em/nre. Eastern hemigpherc. See hemisphere.— .Such were the accounts from the remotest parts east, contented, satisfied.— 5. Pliant, complaisant, accommo-
Eastern question, the collective name given to the sev- wards. Marsden, tr. of Marco Polo. dating.— 6. Unconstrained, graceful,
eral prolilems or complications in the international poli-
easy (e'zi), a.; compar. easier, superl. easiest. easy (e'zi), adv.; compar. easier, superl. easiest,
tics of Europe growing out of the presence of the Turkish Easily.
[Early mod. E. also easie ; < ME. esy, eesy, < ese, [< easy, a.]
power in the southeast.
A person living in or belonging to the ease: see ease, n.] 1. Having ease, (o) Free True ease in writing comes from art, not chance.
H. n. 1.
comfortable as, As those move easiest that have learned to dance.
eastern part of a country or region specifically, from bodily pain or discomfort ; (juiet ; :
;
the patient has slept well and is easy, (b) Fret from Pope, Essay on Criticism, 1. 363.
one belonging to one of the countries lying east
of Europe an Oriental. [Bare.]
anxiety, care, or f retfulness ; quiet ; tranquil , satisfied
easy-chair (e'zi-chSr), «. A chair 80 shaped
; as,an easy mind.
and of such material as to afford a comfortable
The easterns themselves complained of the excessive Keep their thoughts easy and free, the only temper
lieat of the sun. wherein the mind is capable of receiving new informations.
seat especially, an arm-chair upholstered and
;
Whether thou clioose Cenantes' serious air, Gnawing with ray teeth my bonds in sunder, 2. That which may be eaten; food: as, the
Or laugh and shake in Kabelais' eajty-chair. I gain'd my "freedom. Shak., C. of E., v. 1.
birds were delicious eating.
Pope, Dunciad, i. 19. The
the
miserable soldiers, after devonriiig all the horses in
are reduced to the degradation of feeding on dogs,
The French love good eating — they are all gourmands.
easy-going (e'zi-go'ing), a. Inelmed to take city,
cats, rats, etc. Sumner, Orations, I. 28.
Sterne, Tristram Shandy, vii. 17.
matters in an easy way, without jar or friction And she and I the banquet-scene completing
good-natured.
And supper gobbled up in haste. SwI/t, Ladies' Journal.
With dreamy words — and very pleasant eatinq.
Tliose few escaped T. B. Aldrich, The Lunch,
After the easygoing fashion of his day, he [Gray] was Famine and anguish will at last coninivie,
more likely to consider liis salary as another form of pen- Milton, P. L., xi. 778. eating (e'ting), p. a. [Ppr. of eat, v.] Corrod-
sion. Lowell, New Princeton Rev., L 1&4. ing; caustic.
The flavor of Old Virginia is unmistakable, and life II. intrans. 1. To take food; feed.
The eating force of flames, and wings of winds.
drops into an easy-going pace under this influence. He did eo( continually at the king's table. 2 Sam. ix. 13. B. Jonson, Catiline, iii. 3.
C. D. Warner, Their Pilgrimage, p. 205. Why eateth your master with publicans and sinners? Ever, against eating cares.
eat (et), r.pret. ate (at) or eat (et), pp. eaten
;
Mat ix. 11. Lap me in soft Lydian airs.
(sometimes eat), ppr. eating. [Early mod. E. Their daunces ended, they deuoure the meate, for they Milton, L' Allegro, 1. 135.
eten) =
OS. etan =
OFries. ita, eta, NFries. ytten 2. To make way by corrosion; gnaw; pene- for meals a restaurant. ;
= =
MLG. LG. eten D. eten OHG. ezan, ezzan, = trate or excavate by disorganization or destruc-
Ea'ton code. See code.
MHG. ezzen, G. essen Icel. eta =
Sw. ata = = tion of substance: as, a cancer eats into the n. pi. eaux (6z). [F., < L. a(^ua, water:
eau (6),
Dan. wde =
Goth, itan L. edere =
Gr. iiuv = = flesh.
;
The Chub, though he eat well thus dressed, yet as he is Eau de Javelle, a solution prepared l)y mixing,
in jtliar.,
his B'adre eet the AppcUe olle. MandeiriUe, Travels, p. 11. in suitable proportions, potassium carbonate, bleaching-
make thee to eat grass as oxen. Dan. iv. 25. usually dressed, he does not. powder, and water. The solution after filtration contains
They shall
I. Walton, Complete Angler, p. 66.
salt, potassium carbonate, and potassium hypochlorite.
Venator.On my word, master, this Is a gallant Trout
what shall we do with him? While the tender Wood-pigeon's cooing cry It is used chiefly as an antiseptic and a bleacliing agent.
Piaeator. Marry, e'en eat him to supper.
Has made me say to myself, with a sign, Alio Jaoelte's water.— Ea,vi de Luce [from Luce, the name
/. Walton, Complete Angler, p. 77.
"How nice you would eat with a steak in a pie I" of the inventor], a compound of niastii.-, alcohol, oil of lav-
Barham, Ingoldsby Legends, I. 114, ender, oil of aniljer, and atjua anunonite. It is stimulant
2. To corrode; wear awajr: gnaw into; con- Soup and potatoes eat better hot than cold. Russell. and antispasmodic. Also called spiritus ammonia' sued-
sume; waste: generally with aicay, out, up, or natus and O'jua Z.uci'(F.— Eau de Paris, a substitute for
Eating days. See dai/i.— To eat up into the wind eau de Cologne and similar cosmetics. It is sometimea
into: as, rust has eaten away the surface; lines {naut.), to gain to windward to an unusual degree.
taiien in sweetened water as a cordial and stimulant.
eaten out by aqua fortis; these cares cat up all There are craft that from their model and balance of eau-de-'Vie (6'd6-ve'), n. [F., lit. water of life
my time. sail . seem to eat up into the wind.
. .
eau, water (see can); de, of; fie, < L, vita, life.]
A great admirer he Is of the rust of old Monuments, and Quallrough, Boat-Sailer's Manual, p. 9.
The French name
for brandy: specifically ap-
Teades onely those Characters where time hath eaten otU eatable (e't»-bl), a. and n. [< eat + -able.']
plied to the coarser and less purified varieties
the letters.
1. a. Fit to f>e eaten; edible; proper for food; of brandy, the term cognac being generally ap-
Bp. Earle, Micro-coamographle, An Antiquary.
esculent. plied to fine grades Eau-de-vie de Dantzlg, a
Who eat up my people as they eat bread. Ps. xiv. t.
Which I, in capiUl letters. What flsh can any shore, or British sea-town show. wliite liqueur or cordial, sweet and strong, in which are
That's eatable to us, that it doth not bestow intniduct-d for ornament small particles of gold-leaf,
Will eat into thy flesh with aquafortis.
Abundantly thereon ? Drayton, Polyolblon, xxv. 158. Eau-de-vle d'Hendaye, a sweet cordial of which there
And burning corsives, ]1, Janson, Volpoue, iii. 6. —
wliite, which contains the least alco-
As I scaled the Alps, my
Thoughts reflected upon Han- H. n. Anjrtjiingthatmay be eaten; thatwhich are tliree varieties
hol ; green, whicli is the strongest and yellow, ;
nibal, who, with Vinegar and Strong Waters, did eatmUK is fit for or used as food. Plural of eau.
llowM, Letters, L 4S. L eatlX, ».
Passage thro' those Hills. Eatabtcs we brought away, but the earthen vessels we ea'Vet, v. t. [< eaves.] To shelter, as beneath
The taxes were so intoUerable that they eatt up the bad no occasion for. Dampier, Voyages, an. 1685.
EMlyn, Diary, Sept. 17, 1655. eaves. Davies. [Kare.]
renta.
The great business of the sea Is . . .' confined to eating/
eatage (e'taj), n. [A corruption (as if < eat + His hat shap't almost like a cone, . . ,
awap the margin of the coast, and planing It down to u -a<jr) of edige, eddish: see eddish.'] Food for With narrow rim scarce wide enough
depth of perhaps a hundred fathoms. horses and cattle from aftermath. See eddish. To eave from rain the staring ruff.
Huxleg, Physiography, p. 183. T. Ward, England's Reformation, p. 102.
The immense eatage obtained from seeds the same year
To eat crow. See (tomtS.— To eat dirt. See dirt.— To they are sown and after the dax Is pulled. eavedropt, v. See eavesdrop.
«at humble-pie. See ItumbUpu.—To Mtt one oat of Economist, Feb. 1, 1852. eaver (e v6r), n, [E, dial.] Rye-grass. Balli-
house and home, to ruin one by the cost of supporting obj. 6eei.] Amerope + icell. [Devonshire, Eng.]
or ftitvrtaitiiii'..' others. eat-beet, ». [< eat, «.,
Thy wife's friends will eat thee out ofhmtse and home. or bee-eater (which see). Florio. Neither doth it fall behind in rocadow-ground and pas-
Burton, Anat. of Met, p. 544. eaten (e'tn). Past participle of eat. turage, clover, eaver, and trefoil-grass.
Di^oe, Tour througli Great Britain, I. 362.
To eat one's bMUt oUt, to cost more In feeding Uian one eater (e'tir), n. [< ME. etere, < AS. etere (= D.
is wortti :said usoally of an animal, particularly a horse. eter Q. esser Dan. ader= =
Sw. atare), eat- = eaves (evz), n. })l. [Early mod. E. also eves; <
My mare has eattn her head of at the Ax In Alderman- er, < etan. eat.] 1. One who eats; specifical- ME. evese, eovese, pi. evcscs, eaves of a house,
bui7. Country Farmer's Catechism. ly, a menial; a servant. Compare beef-eater. edge (of a hill, a wood, etc.), < AS. efese, yfese,
To eat one's heart, to brood over one's sorrows or dis- Ase byeth the mocbele driukeres and eteres. eaves, edge, =
OFries. ose MLG. ovese, LG.=
appointments. Ayentnte qf Inwyt, p. 47. oese, esc =
OHG. obasa, obosa, obisa, opasa, oposa,
He could not reat bat did his stout heart eat.
; Be not among wlneblbbers, among riotous eaters of opesa, obsa, MHG. obse, G, dial, obesen, obsen, a
Spenser, F. Q., L II. S. lleah. Prov. xxilL 20. porch (G. dial, ousch, uesch, a gutter along the
I will not eat my heart alone.
Nor feed with sfadu a passing wind.
Where are all my eaters! my mouths, now?
B. Jonson, Epictene, lit 2,
eaves), =
= Icel. up» Sw. dial, uffs, eaves, =
Tennyson, In Memorlam, cviii. Goth. iibizKa, a porch, prob. < Goth. «/, under,
Menials appear to have been treated formerly with very
To eat one's terms, in the English inns of court, to go little ceremony ; they were stripped and beaten at their
= OHG. oba, opa, MHG. obe, G. oben, above (cf
through tlic prescribed amount of study preparatory to nuuter's pleasure; and cormorants, eaters, and feeders G. ob-dach, a shelter), etc. see ot'er, from the:
Easy. beyond the wall and sheds the water that falls
Beau, and Ft,, Scornful Lady, Iv. I.
That kud knljt Is eth to know l>y his kene dedes. on the roof; hence, figuratively, any projecting
If you find such a man In close and cordial influence William of Paleme, I. 3571.
with the masses, write me, and these wordu will be eaten rim.
with pleasure H'. M. Baker, New Timothy, p. 21.
More eath It were for mortall wight His tears run down his beard,- like winter's drops
To tell the sands, or count the starres on hye. From earns of reeds. Sliak., Tempest, v. 1.
To eat sonr grapes. See grai>el. = Sm. Fat, Bile, Chev, Spenser, F. Q., IV. xl. 53.
Gnair, Demur, OoMe, Consume. Eat is the general Shrowded under an obscure cloke, and the eves of an old
word. To biu lis to set the teeth Into. To eheic is to grind All hard assayes esteem I eath and light. hat. B. Jonson, Fortunate Isles,
Fair/ax, tr. of Tasso, li. 46.
with the teeth. To gnaw
to bite off little
Is by little, to Sombre streets of palaces with overhanging «aw«, that,
work at with the teeth, where the sultstance is hard or eatht (eTH), adv. [< ME. ethe, eathe, ythe, < AS. almost meeting, form a shelter from tlie fiercest sun.
managed with dilflcnlty and there Is little or nothing t<j edthe, ethe, eath, eth, easily, < edthe, easy: see J. A. Symonds, Italy and Greece, p. 283.
be got ; as, to gnaw a bone. To devour Is to eat up, to eat
eagerly or voraciously. To goMe Is to eat hurriedly or eath, a.] Easily. eaves-board, eaves-catch (evz'bord, -kach),
olTenHively, as in large pieces. To consume Is to eat up, Who thinks him most secnre. eathest sham'd.
Is n. An arris-fillet, or a thick board with a fea-
to eat completely. Bile, cliew, and gnaw do not imiily Fair/ax, tr. of Tasso, x. 42. ther-edge, nailed across the rafters at the eaves
swallowing the others uo.
;
eathlyt (eTH'li), adv. Easily. Halliwell. of a roof to raise the course of slates a little.
One cannot eat one's cake and have It too.
Biekerstag, Thomas and Sally. eating (e'ting), n. [< ME. etynge; verbal n. of Also called caves-lath.
eat. v.] 1. The act of consuining food, espe- eaves-drip (evz'drip), n. [AfE. not found; <
Truth has roogti flavours Ifwe bits It through.
Qsorgs Eliot, Armgart, U. cially solid food. AS. <fes-, yfes-drypa, yfes-dropa (== Icel. npsar-
119
eaves-drip 1826 ebony
dropi =
OSw. opsddrup OFries. osedropta = =
ea'TlngS (e'vingz), «. pi. [Contr. of eavesings: A member of a party of Judaizing Christians
MD. osendrup, oosdrup (also osenloop), D. oos- seo eavesing.'i Eaves. Cotgrave. [Now chiefly which appeared in the church as early as
druip, eaves-drip, stillicide), < efese, eaves, + pro v. Eng.^ the second century and disappeared about the
dryppan, drip, dropa, a drop : see eaves and drij),^bauchoir (a-bo-shwor'); «• [F., < ihaucher, fourth century. They agreed in (1) the recognition of
drop. Ct. caves-drop.^ An ancient custom or law sketch, outline, rough-hew: see hosW-, and cf. Jesus as the Messiah, (2) the denial of his divinity, (3)
belief in the universal obligation of the Mosaic law, and
which required a proprietor to build in such a debauch.'] 1. A large chisel used by statuaries
(4) rejection of Paul and his writings. I'he two great divi-
manner that the eaves-drop from his house or to rough-hew their work. —
2. A great hatchel sions of Ebionites were tlie Pharisaic Ebionites, who em-
buildings should not fall on the land of his or beating instrument used by rope-makers. phasized the obligation of the Mosaic law, and the Esseiiic
neighbor. It was the same as the urban ser- ebb (eb), ». and a. [Early mod. E. ebhe ; < ME. El>ionites, who were more speculative and leaned toward
ehbe, < AS. ebha = D. eh, ebbe = OFries. ebha =
Gnosticism.
vitude of the Bomans, called stillicide (stilUei-
II. a. Relating to the heresy of the Ebionites.
dium). LG. ebbe (> G. ebbe) = Sw. ebh = Dan. ebbe, ebb.
Ebionitic (e'''bi-on-it'ik), a. [< Ebionite + -ic]
eaves-drop (evz'drop), n. [Early mod. E. also Prob. related to Goth, ibuks, backward, and per- Of or pertaining' to the Ebionites or Ebionitism.
eres-drop ; < eaves + drop : see eaves-drip.'\ The haps to Goth, ibns = AS. efen, E. eveii^, q. v.]
Ebionitism (e'bi-on-it-izm), n. [< Ebionite +
water which falls in drops from the eaves of a 1. ». 1. The reflux or falling of the tide; the -ism.] The doctrines or system of the Ebion-
house. return of tide-water toward the sea: opposed
ites. Also Ebionism.
eavesdrop (evz'drop), v. pret. and pp. eaves- to flood OT flow. See tide.
;
The principal monument of the Essenian Ebionitism is
dropped, ppr. eavesdropping. [Early mod. E. As sore wondren somme on cause of thonder, the pseudo-Clementine writings, whose date is somewhere
also evesdrop (and eavedrop); < eaves-drop, n.] On ebbe, on Hood, on gossomer, and on mist. in the latter part of the second century.
Chaucer, Squire's Tale, 1. 261.
1. intrans. 1. To lurk under the eaves or near O. P. Fisher, Begin, of Christianity, p. 499.
the windows of a house to listen and learn what His mother was a witch, and one so strong
That could control the moon, make tlows and ebbs. eblanin (eb'la-nin), n. [Formation not clear.]
is said within doors. Shak., Tempest, v. 1. Same as pyroxanthine.
But truly I cannot blame the gentlewomen ; you stood Sometimes at a low ebbe they [quicksands] are all un- Eblis, Iblees (eb'lis, ib'les), n. [Ar. Iblis.]
evM-dropping under their window, and would not come covered with water. Coryat, Crudities, I. 2. In Mohammedan myth., an evil spirit or devil,
up. Beau, and Fl., Captain, v. 3.
[^schylusj was always at high flood of passion, even in the chief of the fallen angels or wicked jinns.
Telling aome politicians who were wont to eawsdrop in the dead ebb and lowest water-mark of the scene. Before his fall he was called Azazel or Hharis.
disguises. ilillon. Apology lor Sniectymnuus. Dryden, Grounds of Criticism in Tragedy. —
Hall of Eblis, the hall of demons pandemonium. ;
2. Figuratively, to lie in wait to hear the pri- 2. A flowing backward or away ; decline ; de- eboe-light (e'bo-lit), n. [< eboe, appar. W. Ind.,
vate conversation of others. cay; a gradual falling off or diminution: as, +
lights.] The Erythroxylon brevipes, a shrub
and overheard ns. the ebb of prosperity ; crime is on the ebb. of the West Indies.
Strozza hath eavesdropp'd here,
Chapman, Gentleman Usher, ii. 1. There have been divers of your Royal Progenitors who eboe-torch'wood (e'b6-t6rch''wtid), n. Same as
have had as shrewd Shocks ; and 'tis well known how the eboe-light.
n. trans. To listen to in a clandestine man- next transmarine Kings have been brought to lower ebbs. eboe-tree (e'bo-tre), n. A
leguminous tree,
ner. [Rare.] Howell, Letters, ii. 63.
Dipteryx oleifera, of the Mosquito Coast in
The jealous eare of night eave-drops our I hate to learn the ebb of time
tallce.
From yon dull steeple's drowsy chime. Central America, the seeds of which yield a.
Mareton, Antonio and Melllda, I., ii. 1.
Scott, L. of the L., vi. 24. large quantity of oil. They resemble the ton-
It is not civil to eavesdrop him, but I'm sure he tallcs
on 't now. Shirley, Hyde Park, i. 2. Moral principle was at as low an ebb in private as in quin-bean, but are entirely without fragrance.
public life. Prescott, Ferd. and Isa., ii. 14. ebon (eb'gn), n. and a. [Early mod. E. also ehen,
eavesdropper (evz ' drop ' 6r), n. [Early mod.
3t. A name of the common bunting, Emberiza heben, ebene, etc. (cf. D. ebbenhout G. eben- =
E. also evesdropper, esen-dropper ; < eavesdrop,
miliaria. Montagu. holz (> Dan. ibenholt =
Sw. ehenholts), 'ebony-
v., +
-eri.] One who watches for an opportu-
n.f a. Not deep ; shallow. wood'), < OF. benus, ebene, F. ebene Pr. ebena =
nity to hear the private conversation of others.
The water there is otherwise verie low and ebb.
=
Sp. Pg. It. ebano, < L. ebenus, corruptly hebe-
Under our tent^ I'll play the eaves-dropper. Holland, tr. of Pliny, xxxi. 7. nus, < Gr. ipevog, i^evTi, the ebony-tree, ebony,
To hear U any mean to shrink from me. The ebber shore. prob. of Phen. origin ; cf. Heb. hobnin, pi., eb-
Shak., Rich. III., v. 3. Bp. Hall, Works (1648), p. 20. (Haniwell.) ony : so called in allusion to its hardness ; < eben,
Eaves-droppers, or such as listen under walls or windows how ebb a soul have I to take in Christ's love I a stone. Now usually ebony, ebon being chiefly
or the eaves of a house, to hearken after discourse, and Buther/ord, Letters, viii.
thereupon to frame slanderous and mischievous tales, are poetical: see ebony.] I. n. Ebony (which see).
a common nuisance, and presentable at the court leet. ebb (eb), V. [< ME. ebben, < AS. ebbian D.= To write those plagues that then were coming on
Blackstone, Com., IV. xiii. ebben = MLG. LG. ebben (> MHG. eppen, G. Doth ask a pen of ebon and the night.
eavesdropping (evz'drop'ing), n. [Verbal n. ebben) — Sw. ebba = Dan. ebbe, ebb: see the Drayton, Barons' Wars, iv.
noun.] I. intrans. 1. To flow back; return, Of all those trees that be appropriate to India, Virgil
of eavesdrop, v.'\ The act of one who eaves- hath higlily commended tlxe ebene above the rest.
drops the doings of an eavesdropper.
;
as the water of a tide, toward the ocean ; sub- Holland, tr. of Pliny, xii. 4.
side opposed to flow : as, the tide ebbs and
:
Then might the conversations of a Schiller with a II. a. 1. Consisting or made of ebony.
Goethe , , tempt Honesty itself
. into eavesdropping. flows twice in twenty-four hours. See tide.
Carlyle, Schiller. This Watre rennethe, flowynge and ebbynge, be asyde of A gentle youth, his dearely loved Squire,
the Mountayne. MandeviUe, Travels, p. 199. His speare of heben wood beliind him bare.
eavesingt (ev'zing), [E. dial, contr. pi. eav-
n. Spenser, F. Q., I. vii. 37.
But that which I did most admire was, to see the Water
ings, easingSf < SIE. evesynge, eaves (also, ear- 2. Like ebony in color; dark; black.
keep ebbing for two Days together, without any flood, till
lier, evesunge, a shearing, < AS. *efesung, a shear- the Creek where we lived was almost dry. Heaven's ebon vault.
ing (around the edges), verbal n. of efesian, ef- Dampier, Voyages, II. iii. 66. Studded with stars unutterably bright,
sian, shear, =
Icel. ^sa, cut), < evese, edge, eaves: 2. To return or recede; fall away; decline. Througli which the moon's unclouded grandeur rolls.
see eaves.l 1. A
shearing; what is snom off. Now, when all is wither'd shrunk, and dry'd.
Shelley, Queen Mab, iv.
All virtues ebb'd out to a dead low tide. Sappho, with that gloriole
Me sold his eitestinge, theo her the me kerf of. Of ebon hair on calmed brows.
Aneren liiwle, p. 398. Donne, Countess of Salisbury.
Mrs. Brou'ning, Vision of Poets.
2. Eaves. Hay
As we may seo a wynter And felt them slowly ebonist (eb'on-ist), n. [< ebon, ebony, + -isi.] A
ebbing, name and fame.
Iseldes in [on] euesymjes thorgh hete of the Sonne Tennyson, Merlin and Vivien, worker in ebony.
Melteth ... to myst and to water.
=8yn. To recede, retire, decrease, sink, lower, wane, fall ebonite (eb'on-it), ». [^<. ebon, ebony, + -ite^.] A
Piers Plovmwn (C), xx. 193. away. black, hardened compound of caoutchouc or
eaves-lath (evz'lath), n. Same as eaves-hoard. II. trans. To cause to subside. [Rare.]
gutta-percha and sulphur in different propor-
eaves-swallow (evz'swoFo), n. 1. Same as That disdainful look has pierc'd my soul, and ebb'd my tions, to which other ingi-edients may be added
cliff-saallow. This name was first used about 1826, when rage to penitence and sorrow. Steele, Lying Lover, ii. 1.
for specific uses properly, black vulcanite, but ;
these birds appeared in settled parts of the eastern Unit- (eb'ang'kor), The anchor by
ebb-anchor n. used also as a general synonym of vulcanite
which a ship rides during the ebb-tide. (which see).
ebb-tide (eb'tid), n. The reflux of tide-water; ebonize (eb'on-iz), v. t. ; pret. and pp. ebonized,
the retiring tide. ppr. ebonizing. [< ebon^ ebony, -ize.] 1. To +
ebent, «. An obsolete form of ebon. Johnson. stain black, as wood, with a view to the imita-
Ebenacese (eb-e-na'se-e), n. pi. [NL., < L. ebe- tion of natural ebony : as, a bookcase of ebon-
nus (see ebony") + -a'cew.'] A
natural order of izedyiooA. —
2. To make black or tawny ; tinge
gamopetalous exogens, containing 5 or 6 gen- with the color of ebony as, to ebonize the fair-
:
material of any kind. Sometimes, though rarely, used without ebullition. Clerk Maxwell, Heat, p. 25. stances into others which have the appearance
by writers in English, as, for instance, in describing the
phenomena of earthquakes and volcanoes.
ebracteate, ebracteated (e-bras'te-at, -a-ted), ^:r^J„^ri:L?fi*t*^°^U^e^!P?."l'„^^^
turbed or seething condition or appearance, ^b^i^'ne),
Eburna +
n. pi. [NL. (Swain-
a. [< L. e- priv. 4- bractea, a thin plate: see produced by causes other than heat, as when
son, 1840), < -inw.] subfamily of A
gastropods, typified by the genus Eburna, and
bracteate.'i In bot., without bracts. rapidly flowing water encounters numerous ob-
to which have been also referred genera now
When bracts are absent altogether, as is usually the stacles or contrary currents.
known to be little related to it. See cut under
case in the plants of the natural order Cruciferse, . . . The chafing of the water against these huge obstacles Eburna.
such plants are said to be ettracteated. [rocks of granite), the meeting of the contrary currents
R. BeiUley, Botany, p. 181. one with another, creates such a violent ebuUition, . . .
ebumine (eb'6r-nin or -nin). a. [= F. ibur-
that it fills tlie mind with confusion. nin, < L. cbumus, of ivory, < ebur, ivory: see
ebracteolate (e-brak'te-o-lat), a. [< L. e- priv.
-f bracteola, dim. of bractea, a thin plate: see
Bruce, Source of the Nile, I. 15«. ivory.] Made of ivory. [Rare.]
bracteolate.'] In bot., without braetlets. 3. Effervescence occasioned by fermentation All in her night-robe loose, she lay reclined.
Ebraiket, a. A Middle English form of Hebraic. or by any other process which causes the evo- And, pensive, read from tablet eftumtne.
Ebrewt, «. An obsolete form of Hebrew. lution of an aeriform fluid, as in the mixture of Scott, L. of L. M., vi. 19.
ebriet^ (e-bri'e-ti), n. [Formerly ebrietie; < F. an acid with a carbonated alkali. [In this sense ec-, < Gr. ck-, Ik, reg. form before
[Ii., etc., ec-j
ebriete = Pr. ebrietat = Sp. ebriedad = Pg. ebri- formerly buUition.] a consonant of out, etc. : see ex-.]
£«-, ff, A
edade = It. ebrietd, ehbrield, < L. ebrieta{t-)s, We cannot find It to hold neither in Iron or copper, prefix of Greek origin, the form of ex- before a
drunkenness, < ebrius, drunken: see ebriotu.l which is dissolved with less ebuUilion. consonant^ as in ec-lipse, ec-logue, ecstasy, etc.
Drunkenness; intoxication by spirituous li- Sir T. Brxmme, Vulg. Err., iv. 7. It is sometimes used in scientific terms as equiv-
quors; derangement of the mental functions 4. Figuratively, an outward display of feeling alent to ecto- or exo-, as opposed to en-, endo-,
caused by drink. [Now rare.] a sudden burst ; a pouring forth ; an overflow- or en to-.
Bitter almonds, ... [as an] antidote against ebriety, ing : as, an ebullition of passion. 6caille-Work (a-kaly'w6rk), n. [< F. ^caille, =
hath commonly failed. Sir T. Bmmt, Vulg. Err., IL «. The greatest ebullitiona of the imagination. Johruon. It. scaglia (< G. schale, scale) (see scaled), -i-
We have a very common expreaaton todescribe a roan In Disposed to refer this to inexperience, or the ebuUition
E. work.] Decorative work made by sewing
a state of 4briety, that " he is as drunk aa a beast," or that of youthful spirit. yrescoM, Ferd. and Isa., L 3. scales cut from quills upon a foundation, as
•'
he ja beastly drunk." /. Dliraeli, Curioa. of Ut., lU. 32. of velvet or silk, forming patterns in relief.
It was not an extravagant ebullition of feeling, but
^brillade (F. pron. a-bre-IvW), n. [P., < It. might have been calculated on by any one acquainted with When skilfully done it resembles mother-of-
sbrigliata, a pull of the bridle, check, reproof, < the spirlta of ourcommunlty. pearl work.
Ernermn, Hist. Discoume at Concord, ecalcarato (e-kal'ka-rat), a.
sbrigliare, unbridle, undo, loosen, < s- (< L. ex-), [< NL. *ecalcara-
out, + briglia, bridle.] In the manege, a check =8yil. Ebullition, Eferwtemet, Fermentation. Ebutti- tus, < L. e- priv. -(-' calcar, a spur see calca- :
given to a horse by a sadden jerk of one rein '«'«•] In -ool. and bot. having no spur "' ™'
("^.'.T,^
uraUvely 5St°-h?
to that 'h""
which suggests heated or"f
'J5!,''k"*.S''' fP""*** .1«-
intense activ- „„_;„„„„ „„! „ » Pi, ^"^ or eal. ,
'
when he refuses to turn. Ity. BferveMence U not the result of heat or of the escape .S^^' 1" "^^y
:„„i sense
technical „^
of i
the latter word,
ebriosity (e-bri-os'i-ti), n. [Formerly ebrioaitie; of steam, but of the escape of ^m from a liquid. Fer- £caninat (e-ka-ni nil), n. pi. C< L- C- priv. +
= F. < ttriositi, < L. ebriosita( t-)s, < ebriosus, given mentation is a process often invisible, often taking place caninus, canine (tooth).]
in solids, and sotnetimes i'"Hluclng«/m
In Blyth's classifi-
to drink, < ebrius, drunken: see ebriom.] Habit- /' ]mn\uc\ngeferveaeencein liquids. cation of Mammalia, a term
„ilT' „;*'''i,v'''i' proposed as a sub-
ual drunkenness. [Bare.]
ebulumt. ebulust (eb'u-lum, stitute for the lusectivora of Cuvier.
Th.,„,i.H,....M.,.-.L..K
"
«r..-K ....-—.._.
-lus), ». [L.] The herb wall-
That religion which excuseth Noah in the aged sur-
. . .
wort, danewort, or dwarf elder.
ecardinal (e-kSr'di-nal), a. [< NL. *ecardina-
prizal of six hundred yean . . . will neitber acquit «*n-
E. PhiUips, 1706.
lis, < L. e- priv. cardo (cardin-), hinge see + :
otity nor ebriety In their known and intended perversions. t^rdinal.] Hingeless, inarticulate, or lyopo-
Sir T. Browne, Vulg. Err., T. 21. Eboria (e-bii'ri-a), «. prL. (Ser- matous, as a brachiopod; of or pertaining to
Of all ebriotUy, who does not prefer to be intoxicated by ville, 1834), < L. ebur, ivory: see
the Ecardines.
the sir he breathes? Thonau, Walden, p. 2S4. ivory.] A
genus of longicom
Ecardines (e-kar'di-uez), n. pi. [NL., < L. e-
ebrlons (e'bri-ns), a. [= P. ihrieux = Sp. Pg. beetles, of the family Ceramby-
I>riv. +
cardo (cardin-), a hinge.] One of the
ebrioso =
It. ebrioso, cbbrioso, < L. ebrius, (uiink- cidtc, comprising many species,
two oi-ders of the class Brachiopoda. it includes
en.] Given to indulgence in drink ; drunken mostly of Central aiid South those >>rachiujiods the bivalve sliell of which has no hinge
drunk; intoxicated. [Rare.] America and the West Indies. and little if any dilTerence between the dorsal and ven-
ebucclnatorf (e-buk'si-na-tor), Ten, however, are found in tral valves, and contains the families Lingulidce, Ditci-
n. [< L. e, out,
nidce, and Craniidtr, which are thus collectively distin-
+ prop, bucinator, a trumpeter: see
bue<;irat4/r, North America, as the common
guished from the TeMicardines. Tne term issynonymous
buccinator.] A
tnuupeter. [Bare.] E. quadrigeminata. with Lfiopomata, Inarticulafa, Pleuropygia, and Sarco-
The ebuceinator ahewer, and declarer of these news, I ebuflne (eb'u-rin), n. [< L. ebur, brot-hiota, all of which are names of this division of
the angel and ambassador of God. ivory (see irory), -I- -ine^.] An brachiojMxIs.
Beeon, Worlcs, I. 4X artificial ivory composed of Eturia quadri-
Ecardinia (e-kar-din'i-ft), n. pi. [NL.] Same
ebulliatet (e-bul'yat), r. i. [Improp. for *ebul- bone-dust, gum tragacanth, and as Ecardines.
late, < LL. etmUatut, pp. of ebuUare, for the more some coloring subst^uice. ecarinate (e-kar'i-nat), a. [< NL. *ecarinatus,
correct L. MmOire, boil up : see anMient.] To eburite (eb'u-rit), «. [< L. ebw, ivory, -ifea.] < L. e- priv.
+ +
carina, keel : see carinate] In
boil or bubble up ; efferreace. Same as eburine. ornitli. and bot., without a carina or keel.
Whence thU 2» pUy-oppugnlng argmnant wni ebuUiate. Eburna (e-b*r'nS), n. [NL., fem. of L. ebumus, 6c&Tt6 (a-kiir-ta,'), «. [P., lit. discarded, pp.
Prynne, aistrlo-Mastix, I. Iv. S. of ivory, < ebur, ivory: see ivory.] A
genus of of ecarter, discard, set aside, < ^-, < L. ex, out,
+
ebullience, ebulliency (e-bul'yens, -ven-si), n. gastropods, variously carte, card : see cardi, and cf. discard.] A
[< rhullienl : see -(nice, -eney.] boiling over; A Umited. (a) By Lamarck it game played by two persons with thirty-two
a bursting forth ; overflow. wasmade to include tbeivory- cards, the small cards from two to six inclusive
The natural and enthnslastick fervour of men's spirits,
ahell E. glabrata, as well as being excluded. The players having cut for the deal,
tnrreted species of the family which is decided Ijy the highest card, the dealer gives five
and the ebuUieney of their fancy. Cudvmth, Sermons, p. 88.
Bueeinidte. (b) By most later canls to each player, three and two at a time, and turns
The absence of leatraints —
of severe conditions in — writen the typical species up the eleventh card for trump. If he turns up a king,
floe art allows a flush and ebullience, an opulence of pro- has been referred t« the OH- he scores one and if the king of tnimps occurs in the hand
;
duction, that la often called the highest genius. rida and the genus restrict- of either player, the liolder may score one by announcing
A. Bain, Corr. of Forces, ed to buccinids, like K. epi- it lieforo playing. The cards rank as follows king (high- :
rata, which are by others des- est), queen, linave, ace, ten, etc. A player having a higher
ebullient (f-bul'yent), a. [< L. ebuaien(t-)g, ignated as the genus Latrun- canl uf the suit led must take the trick with such a card
ppr. of rbullire, boil out or up, < e, out, + bul- eulut. As thus limited, it is if he cannot follow suit, he may play a trump or not, as
;
the seeds and juice from tlie aperture left at the base. A an eccentric person. liarities of motion are essentially those of a crank-motion,
precipitate obtained from tlie juice is the elaterium of Still he preserves the character of a humourist, and and it may be considered as a crank having a wrist of
medicine, a very powerful hydragogue cathartic. See ela- finds most pleasure in eccentric virtues. larger diameter than the throw. In the steam-engine it is
terium. Goldsmith, Vicar, iii. a disk fitted to the shaft, with its center placed at one side
of the center of the shaft, and it acts to convert the rotary
ecbasis (ek'ba-sis), n. [= F. ccbase, < L. ecbasis, So would I bridle thy eccentric soul. motion of the shaft into the reciprocating motion of the
< Gr. CK3aatc,' a going out, issue, event, < iKJiai- In reason's sober orbit bid it roll. valve-gear of the cylinder, and thus to make the engine
vciv, go out, come out, happen, < t/c, out, + pai- Whitehead, On Churchill. self-acting. (See link-motion, reversing -gear, and cutoff.)
veiv, go, = E. come : see base^, basis.] An argu- 6. Of or pertaining to an eccentric : as; the ec- In this sense sometimes written ezcentric.
ment drawn from the relation of cause and centric anomaly of a planet ; the eccentric rod 3. One who or that which is irregular or anom-
effect; especially, an argument for or against of a steam-engine. alous in action; a person of eccentric habits.
a certain course of action, such as the passage In senses 3 and 6 sometimes written excen-
Mr. Farquhar added another to bis gallery of middle-
of a proposed bill or law, from a consideration tric. aged eccentrics. Athenceum, Jan. 14, 18S8, p. 60.
of probable consequences. Eccentric angle, in (/eom-., an angle connected with an
ellipse and denned as follows: Let ABDE he an ellipse. An^lar advance of an eccentric. See angular.— Ec-
ecbatic (ek-bat'ik), a. [< Gr. as if 'eKpaTrndg, Upon the transverse axis centric of the eccentric, a circle whose center is remote
< en.iaiveiv, happen: see ecbasis.] Relating to AB as a diameter erect from the earth (in tliu I'tolemaic theory) or from the sun (in
an event that has happened; denoting a mere the circle ABFG. Then, the Copernican), and which carries round its circumference
taking any point on the a second circle, called the eccentric, and this again a third,
result or consequence, as distinguished from called the epicycle,which cames a planet. An eccentnc
ellipse, as H, let fall the
telie, which implies purpose or intention. Thus,
the sentence " Events fell out so that the prophecy was
perpendicular uponHK of an eccentric was supposed by Ptolemy to explain the
the transverse axis AB, motion of Mercury, and by Copernicus to explain the mo-
fulfilled" is echatic; but the sentence "Events were ar- tions of Mercury and Venus. Tycho suj^ested such an
and continue this per-
ranged in order that the prophecy might be fulfilled " is pendicular until it cuts explanation for the motions of Mars.— Equation of the
telic. See equation.
the circle at the point L eccentric.
ecblastesis (ek-blas-te'sis), rt. [NL., < Gr. t/c- on the same side of the eccentrical (ek-sen'tri-kal), a. Same as eccen-
(iAdaniaiq, a shooting or budding forth, < cKJi^Ji- transverse axis AB. Join tric.
ardvuv, shoot or sprout out, < in, out, -f- /JAapro- L with the common cen- eccentrically (ek-sen'tri-kal-i), adv. With ec-
ter, C, of the ellipse and
veiv, sprout.] In bot., axillaryprolification in the centricity; in an eccentric manner or position.
circle. Tlien, the angle
flower: a term applied by Engelmann to the BCL, reckoned from one G Also excentrically.
occurrence of adventitious buds in the axils of determinate end, B, of the Eccentric Angle.
transverse axis, is called Swift, Tlab'lais, and that favourite child,
one or more parts of the flower. Who, less eccentrically wild.
the eccentric angle of the point H. The expression is de-
ecbole (ek'bo-le), n. [NL., < Gr. EK^>.^,a, rived from eccentric anomaly. —
Eccentric anomaly. See Inverts the misanthropic plan.
throwing out (£(C/3o/.i^ X6yov, a digression), < h- —
anomaly. Eccentric cam, a circular disk used as a cam, And, hating vices, hates not man.
Lloyd, Familiar Epistle.
pd'AXsiv, throw OTit: see Ecballium.] 1. Inrhet., in which the center of rotation is outside the center of fig-
a digression. —
2. In Gr. music, the raising or ure.— Eccentric Chuck. See c/iwcfe*.— Eccentric circle.
Same as II., 1.— Eccentric cutter. SeecH^^cri.— Eccen- eccentric-gear (ek-sen'trik-ger), n. In mecli.j
sharping of a tone opposed to eclysis.
:
tricequation. Same -ascj uat iono/the ecceyit ric(\v]uch8ee, a terra including all the links and other parts
ecbolic (ek-borik), a. and n. [= F. ecbolique, < under c/'trtf/o/O-— Eccentric equator. Same as egi/anf. wliieh transmit the motion of an eccentric.
Gr. eK36?M>v, se. (papiianov, a drug for expelling —Eccentric hypertrophy of the heart. See hypertro-
phy.— "EccexitTio place of a planet, its place as seen from eccentric-hoop (ek-sen'trik-hop), n. Same as
£»c;3aAAf:(v, throw out: see ecbole.]
the fetus, < I. eccentric-strap.
the center of its oi^tit.- Eccentric theory, a theory of
a.Promoting parturition producing abortion. ; the sun's motion which uses an eccentric in place of an epi- eccentricity (ek-sen-tris'i-ti), Vi' pi. eccentrici-
H. H. A drug promoting parturition. cycle.— Eccentric wheel, a wheel which is fixed on an ties (-tiz). [= F. = Sp. excentrici-
excentficite
;
applied to actions or conditions, it frequently implies some Akenside was a young man warm with every notion . . .
mation of the latter word was not understood), degree of wonder, and is then nearly the same as surpris- connected with the sound of liberty, and by an eccentricity
< L. eace, lo in LL. and ML. an assistant pron.
! ing : as, it is odd that he does not write. Queer often ex- which such dispositions do not easily avoid, a lover of con-
tradiction, and no friend to anything established.
or adv., this, here see ecce Immo.] Same as
:
presses a singularity that is <lroll. Whimsical is nearer to
Johnson, Akenside.
eccentric, applying to one who often acts upon capricious
hcBceeity.
and irregular fancies of a rather amusing kind. For con-
eccentnc (ek-sen'trik), a. and n. [Formerly nection with quaint, see ancient. See also wondcr/ul, ir- 6. An eccentric action or characteristic; a
also ecoentnck; = F. excentrique = Pr. excen- regular, Janctful. striking peculiarity of character or conduct.
: ;
Also called ceccntric-hoop. power, also as adj., < LL. ecclesia, the church: ecclesiastical (e-kle-zi-as'ti-kal), a. [< eccle-
eccentrometer (ek-sen-trom'e-ter), H. [< LL. see ecclesia.'] One who maintains the suprem- siastic -al.] Pertaining or relating to the +
ecceiitros, eccentric, +
metrum, measure.] Any acy of the ecclesiastical domination over the church; churchly; not civil or secular: a,s, ec-
instrument used to determine the eccentricity civil power. Imp, Diet. clesiastical discipline or government ecclesias- ;
Puseyites and ritualists, aiming to reinforce ecdesiasli- eccritict (e-krit'ik), w. [< Gr. impirmd^, se- echelon (esh'e-lon), V. t. [< echelon, ».] To
eism, betray a decided leaning towai'ds archaic print, as cretive, < iKKpiTOC, secreted, separated see eccri- form in echelon.
:
-ology.'] 1. The science of the church as an anat. and zool., a notch, nick, or indentation,
organized society, and of whatever relates to as on the edge or surface of a part an emar- ;
Christology naturally precedes ecclesiology in the order more depression, and less than a furcation or
of the system, as Ciirist precedes the church. forfieation.
Sucking-fish {Echeneis remora).
Schaf, Hist. Christ. Church, I. § 96. 6chauguette (F. pron. a-sho-get'), «• [P., a
It will furnish future writers in the history and eccle- watch-turret, < OF. eschauguette, eschalguette, nated disk or sucker, composed of numerous
siology of Ireland with a most valuable storehouse of in- oldest form eschargaite (ML. reflex, scaragu- transverse plates set obliquely upward and
formation. Athenceum.
ayta), orig. a company on guard, then a single backward, forming an adhesive surface by
2. The science of church architecture and dec- sentinel, then a sentry-box, watch-tutrret (cf. which the fish attaches itself to various objects,
oration. It treats of all the details of church furniture, Walloon scarwaiter, be on the watch), < OHG. as a larger fish, a ship's bottom, etc. The type is
ornament, and their symbolism, and is cultivated
etc.,
"skarwahta, MHG. scharwate (G. schartcache), < the common remora or sucking-fish, E. naucrates. By
especially by the High Church party in the Church of Eng- some it is extended to include all the species of the fam-
land. OHG. skara, MHG. 6. schar, a company, a di- and by others restricted to elongated slender species
vision or detail of an army, a crowd, + "walita,
ily,
Eastern Ecclesiology may be divided into two grand with numerous plates to the suckers, like E. naucrates.
branches, Byzantine and Armenian. MHG. waclite, G. wacht, a watch, > OF. waite, echeum (e-ke'um), n. ; pi. echea (-a). [L. echea,
J. M. Neale, Eastern Church, I. 169. guaite, E. wait: see wait.] bartizan. A < Gr. i/x^ia, pi. of i/x^'ov, a kind of loud kettle-
eccles-tree (ek'lz-tre), n. A
dialectal variant eche^t, «• a.nd pron. A
Middle English form of drum or gong, < f/xoc, vx'lt a sound, esp. a loud
of axletree. [Prov. Eng.] each. sound, roar, i/xci^', sound, ring: see echo.] In
Ecclus. An abbreviation of Ecclesiasticus. eche^t, V. t. An obsolete form of eke. arch., one of the sonorous bell-shaped vases of
eccopet (ek'o-pe), n. [NL., < Gr. ckkottti, a cut- eche^t, n. A
Middle English form of ache''-. bronze or clay which the ancients are said to
ting out, an incision, < itiK&irTnv, cut out, < t/c, eche*t, o- [ME., earlier ece, < AS. ece, everlast- have introduced in the construction of their
out, + KOTTTeiv, cut.] In surg., the act of cut- ing, eternal cf OS. ewig ; . =
OFries. ewich, Swig theaters to give greater power to the voices of
ting out ; excision specifically, a perpendicu- 1). eeuwig = =
OHG. ewic, MHG. ewie, ewec, G. the actors. See acoustic vessel, under acoustic.
;
lar division of the cranium by a cutting instru- ewig Dan. Sw. evig, =
everlasting, eternal, < Echeveria (ech-e-ve'ri-a), n. [NL., named af-
ment. =
OHG. ewa, etc., Goth, atxcs, an age, eternity: ter Echereri, a botanic artist.] A genus of suc-
see ayl, age, etern.] Everlasting; eternal. culent plants, natural order Crassulacew, chiefly
eccoprotict (ek-o-prot'ik), a. and n. [< NL.
eccoproticus, < Gr. ttmoTTpuTiKdg, < cKnoTrpovv (only Than like song that ever is eche. natives of Mexico. It is now included in the
in pass.), clear of dung, < in, out, + Koirpoq, Owl and Nightingale, 1. 742. genus Cotyledon.
dung.] I, a. Having the quality of promoting In helle heo schulle forbeme echiaster (ek-i-as't&r), n. [NL., prop, eehinas-
alvine discharges laxative ; loosening gently
;
;
On eche sorynesse. tcr (which is used in another application: see
cathartic. Old Eng. Miscellany (ed. Morris), p. 72. Echinaster), < Gr. ex'ivoQ, hedgehog, + acTijp, a
H. n. A
medicine which purges gently, or echelon (esh'e-lon), n. [< F. echelon (= Sp. es- star.] 1. A kind of stellate sponge-spicule.
which tends to promote evacuations by stool calon), a round of a ladder, a step, stepping- Sottas. 2. [cap.] genus of coleopterous — A
a laxative. stone, echelon, < echelle, OF. eschelle Pr. Sp. insects. Erichson. = '
for the genus of vipers ( Viperidw) called Bitis by pyriform, and oral branchiie; the typical sea-
Gray and Cope. Merrem, 1820. [Not in use.] urchins or sea-eggs. The genera are numerous,
— 3, In mammal. : (a) The tj7)ical genus of the such as Echimts, Echinothnx, Toxoptieustes, etc.
family Echidnid<e, containing the aeuleated ant- echinidan (e-kin'i-dan), n. sea-urchin ; one A
eater or spiny ant-eater of Australia and Tas- of the Echinidw.
mania, E. hystrix or aculeata, and another spe- echiniform (e-ki'ni-form), a. In entoni., same
cies, E. latcesi of New Guinea, together with a as echinoid.
-. [NL., < Gr. tx^-
fossil one, E. oweni. Tliey have 5 to«8 on each foot;
-^N
Echiniscus (ek-i-nis'kus), n.
the snout is straight and moderately developed. Tachy- TOf,a hedgehog, +
-iCKoq, dim. suffix.] ge- A
riiotaus is the same, and is tlie name properly to be used nus of bear-animalcules or water-bears, of the
for this genus according to zoological rules of nomen-
clature, the name Echidna having been preoccupied in
family Macrobiotidw : a synonym is Emydium.
another sense, though it has most currency in this sense. E. bellermanni is an example.
See Acanthoglogfui, ant-eater. Cueier, 1797. (&) [J, c.] echinital (e-kin'i-tal), a. [< echinite -al,'] +
A species of the genus Echidna or family Echid- Spiny Rat {EcJtt'mys cnyentunsis Pertaining to an echinite or fossil sea-urchin.
nidiE. The echidna resemliles a large hedgehog, except- echinite (e-ki'mt), n. [< Gr. ex'voc, a hedge-
ing that the spines are much longer, and the snout is long echint, »• [ME.,<L. ecftiniw; seeecA»nu«.] A hog, sea-urchin, + E. -ite^.l A
fossil sea-urchin.
and slender, with a small aperture at the end for the pro- sea-hedgehog ; a sea-urchin. Ecldnites are found in all fossiliferous strata,
trusion of the long, flexible, worm-like tongue. The ani- but are most abundant and best preserved in
mal is nocturnal, fossorial, and insectivorous, and catches Men knowen whiche strondes habounden
... moflt of
the Chalk. The term is an indefinite one,
insects with its long, sticky tongue, whence it is known as tendre flashes or of sharpe fisshes that hyxten echynnya.
these fossils being of various genera, as Go-
the porcupine ant-eater. The echidna is closely related to CAaucer, Boethius, p. 82.
niocidaris, Echinothuria, etc. The Paleozoic
the omithorhynchus, or duck-billed platypus, and, like it, [NL. (so called on echinites form an order Paltechinoidea, repre-
is oW parous.
Echinacea (ek-i-na'sf-a), n.
account of the long spinescent bracts of the sented by such genera as Pal<echinug, Eoci-
4. A genua of echinoderms. DeBUtinville, 1830. daris, etc. See cut xmder Echinothurixdae.
columnar receptacle), < Gr. f;i:(vof, a hedgehog,
Echidnse (e-kid'ne), n. pi. [NL., pi. of echidna, genus of coarse composite plants Echinobothrla
(e-ki-no-both'ri-a), n.
< L. echidna, an adder, viper: see Echidna.'] A -I- -acea.'] A pi. [NL. (Eudolphi), pi. of Echino-
of the prairies of North America, allied to Rud-
group of bombycid moths. Hiibner, 1816.
beckia, but with long rose-colored rays and
bothrium.'] group named for the A
Echionidae (e-kid'ni-de), ». pi. [NL., < Echid- cestoid worms. See Echinobothrium.
prickly-pointed chaff. There are two species, which
na + -iVte.] The family of monotrematous or- are occasionally cultivated. Their thick black roots liave
Echinobothrium (e-ki-no-both'ri-
nithodelphian or prototherian mammals con- a pungent taste, and are used in popular medicine under um), n. [NL., < Gr. «;f(wc, a hedge-
stituted by the genera Echidna (or Tachyglos- the name of btack-gatnpson. hog, +jiodpiov, dim. of Ii60po(, a pit,
tm) and Zaglosgus (or Acanthoglossui). They Echinarachnius (e-ki-na-rak'ni-us), n. [NL. trench.] A
genus of cestoid worms,
have, iu addition to the ordinal and superordlual cbarac- (Leske, 1778), < Gr. ix'voc, a hedgehog, sea- or tapeworms, of the family Diphylli-
urchin, -I- apaxvv, a spider.] A
^nus of flat, ir- dce, having on the head two fossettes
regular petalostichous sea-urchms, of the fam- with hooks. The separated proglottides
ily MellitidoB (or ScutelUdce), with no perfora- continue to live and $rrow for some time in-
tions or lunules. E. parma, of the Paciflc and Atlan- dependently. E. minimutn and E. typus are
examples. Also Echineibothriuin.
tic coasts of the United States, is known as the »and-doUar
or cake-urchin. B. excentrieus is the common cake-urchin Echinobrissidse (e-ld-no-bris'i-de), n.
of the Pacitlc coast. See cut MQdet cake-urchin. pi. [NL., < Echinobrissus + -ida;.~\
Echinaater (ek-i-nas'tfer), n. [NL., < Gr. exivoc, A family of irregular sea-urchins,
a hedgehog, sea-urchin, +
aari/p, a star.] A typified by the genus Echinobrissus.
genus of starfishes, of the family SoUutridce.' Echinobrissns (e-ki-no-bris'u8)j ^^
[NL., prop. * Eciiinobryssus, < Gr. exi-
voi, a hedgehog, sea-urchin, + jSpvaaoc, a kind
of sea-urchin.] The typical genus of the fam-
ily Echinobrisbidce.
Echinocactus (e-ki-no-kak'tus), n. [NL., < Gr.
ix'ifoi, a hedgehog,
ters which they share with Omithorhyrtehida, convoluted + cactus.]
KcucToc,
cerebral hemispheres, perforated acetabulum, as In birds, A genus of cactace-
the facial region of the skull produced into a long, slen- ous plants, globose
der rostrum with the nostrils at its end, stylifomi mandib- or oval, and some-
ular rami, vermiform prfjtniaile tongue, no true teeth,
feet not webbed, but furnished with long claws, and no times gigantic,
tibial spur. The family is properly ctdleilTaehygltMtida. strongly ribbed, or
Echidnina (ek-id-m'nS), «. pi. [NL., < Echid- with tubercles in
rui + -ina^.} A group of mammals represented vertical or spiral
bv Echidna. Bonaparte, 1837. rows. They are armed
with clusters of short
ecoidnlne (e-kid'nin), n. [< L. echidna, viper,
spines, at the base of
+ Serpent-poison; the secretion from
-ine-.] which, upon the younger
the poison-glands of the viper and other ser- parts of the plant, are
pents. Echidnine Is a clear, viscid, neutral, yellowish Dome the large and Echinocactus viridtscens.
fluid, containing albumin, mncus, fatty matter, a yellow showy flowers. Over 200
coloring principle, and, among it* salts, pliaaphates and SeM^master teMttu, species have l)een described, mostly ^lexican, with a con-
chlorida. Associated with the albamin Is a peculiar ni- siderable number within the limits of the United States.
trogenoaa body, to which the name eekidmne is more a West Indian Echinocardiom (e-ki-no-kar'di-um), n. [NL.,
S. mpoiUtu If an example. E. tenlut Is
particnlailj applied. The poison-bag of a viper seldom
contains more than 2 grains of the poisonous liquid ; ^^
species, extending northward on the Atlantic coast of the < Gr. £;tivof, a hedgehog, -t- Kapdia =
E. heart.]
of a grain is snIBcient to kill a small bird.
United States, having the spines sheathed in membrane
an<t occurring only at the angles of the calcareous plates
A genus of spatangoid
[NL., < Echi- sea-urchins, or heart-ur-
Echimyidie (ek-i-mi'i-de), n. pi. of the upprr .-urfaVe. CritteUa is a synonym.
mys + -iVte.] A family of hystricomorphio ro- EchinasteridsB (e-ld-nas-ter'i-de), n. pi. [NLv chins, of the family Spa-
dents, taking name from the genus Echimys. < Echinaster + A
family of starfishes
-id<B.] tangidw. E. cordatum
Also Echinomyida;. with two rows of tube-feet, a skeletal frame of occurs on both coasts
[NL., < Echi- lengthened ossicles, and spines on those of the of the Atlantic. Leske,
EchlmyinSB (e-M-mi-I'ne), H. pi.
mys + A
subfamily of hystricomorphio
-in(P.] dorsal surface a synonym of Solastrida:.
:
1778. Also called Am-
phidotus.
rodents, of the family Octodontida, related to echinate (ek'i-nat), a. [< L. echinatus, set with
the porcupines ; the hedgehog-rats, it is a large prickles, prickly, < ec/«»nM», a hedgehog: see echi- echinochrome (e-ki'no-
group of numerous genera, dilTering much in external nus.] Spiny, like a hedgehog; bristling with krom), n. [< Gr. ex'^'V,
form and aspect The African gronnd-pig, Aulacodut sharp points ; bristlv. AnrcAina(<>ur/aceisone thick- a hedgehog, sea-urchin,
rwindtriamu, belongs to this sobnmQy, as do the West
Indian genera Capromiif and Plagiodan. (See cut under
ly covered with sharp elevations like spines bristling, and
EchinocardiutH cordatum.
+ xp<->l"^t color.] See the
Isto be distinguished from a muriealt tur/ace, in which extract.
Auiaeodut.} AH thereat of the genera are South Amer-
the elevations are scattered, lower, and not so acute.
ican. Of these the ooypon, Myopotamut eoyput, is the
best-known form, though not a typical one. (See cut echinated (ek'i-na-ted), a. [< echinate -erf2.] + Dr. C. A. MacMunn describes the spectroscopic or chemi-
cal characters of the blood of various worms and mollusks.
under coypou.) The most repreaentaUTe genera are Echi- Keudered prickly or bristly. One of the most interesting pigments which he has de-
myi and Lonche ret, or the spuv rata proper, of which there Fibre echinated by laterally projecting spicules. tected is that which he CJills crAiHooArom^, . . . obtained
are a dozen or more species, narlog prickles In the fur. Lendenfeid. from the perivi^jceral cavity of .Strongylocentrotus lividua.
Ceremim, Dactyiomyi, and ITssoniHt are other examples Jour. Hoy. Micron. Soc., 2d ser., VI. I. 48.
witboaimtnea. OarfsrafonUafoasugeniiafromthebone- Echini (e-ki'ni), «. pi. [L., pi. of echinus, a
caveaofnadL Also written EchimySta, Eehimyna, Echi- hedgehog, sea-urchin : eee echinus.] 1. InCu- echinococci. n. Plural of echinococcus.
mt/dina, and, more correctly, Eehinomyinae.
viers system of classification, the second fam- EchinOCOCCifer (e-ki-no-kok'si-f6r), n. [NL., <
Echimyna (ek-i-mi'n|i), n. pi. [NL., < Eckimys ily of pedicellate echinoderms, containing the echinococcus -¥ h. ferret E. 6earl.] A genus of
-(--(/)«'/.] Same
as AcMmmiUE. sea-urchins equivalent to several modem fam- tapeworms, in which, in the hydatid state, the
:
A cucurbit ace ous genus of plants of the eastern echinodermatous (e-k!-no-d6r'ma-tus), a. [<
United States, of a single annual species, E, NL. echinodermatus^ < Gr. ex'^^o^y a hedgehog,
lohata. It has numerous white flowers, and an oval, sea-urchin, + (Jf/3//a(r-), skin.] Having a spicu-
prickly fruit, which becomes dry and bladdery, and opens late or indurated skin specifically, of or per-
;
at the top for the discharge of the seeds. It is frequently taining to the echinoderms or Echinodermata.
cultivated for ornament, and is known as the wild balsam-
apple. By some authorities the genus is extended to in- Also echinodermal.
clude Menarrhiza and other western and Mexican species. Echinodes (ek-i-no'dez), n. [NL. (Le Conte,
Echinoderes (ek-i-nod'e-rez), n, [NL., < Gr. 1869), < Gr. e;t'p(5(5^f, like a hedgehog, prickly, <
fj^fvof, a hedgehog, + 6ep7j^ neck.] A
singu- k-x'ivoq^ a hedgehog, sea-urchin, +
eido^, form.]
lar genus of minute worm-like animals of un- 1. In entom.f a genus of beetles, of the family
certain position, supposed to be intermediate HisteridcB, with two North American species, E.
in some respects between the wheel-animal- setiger and E. decipiens. 2. — A
genus of insec-
cules and the crustaceans. The rounded head is tivorous mammals: same as Hmnicentetcs.
furnished with recurved hooks, and is succeeded by 10 Echinoglossa (e-ki-no-glos'a), n. pi. [NL., < Echiitfimetra oblongata, with spines in part removed to show the
or 11 distinct segments, the last of which is bifurcated; Gr. cx'Wf, a hedgehog, + yXwffffa, the tongue.] plates of the test.
A grade or series of Mollusca, represented by the
gastropods, eephalopods, pteropods, and scaph- The typical genus of regular sea-urchins of
opods, as collectively distinguished from the the family Echinometridce. E. oblongata is an
Lipoglossa (which see) alone, in E. R. Lankesters example.
arrangement of Mollusca, the Echinoglmsa are d ivided into Ecllinoinetridae (e-ki-no-met'ri-de), n. pi.
three classes Gastropoda, Cephalopoda (including Ptero-
:
noderma.'] I,* a. itaving a prickly covering; kingdom Echinodermata; the sea-urchins or Echinomyinae (e-ki"no-mi-i'ne), n. pi. [NL.,
echinodermatous. sea-eggs. They have a rounded, depressed (not elongat- < Ectiinomys -ina;.'\ +Same as Ecliimyiiiw.
'
ed) form, subspherical, cordiform, or discoid, inclosed in Echinomys (e-kl'no-mis), n. [NL., < Gr. ix''i'oc,
H. n. Any one of the Echinodermata. =
All echinodenns have a calcareous skeleton, and many
a test or shell composed of many calcareous plates closely
and usually immovably connected, studded with tubercles
a hedgehog, nvc +
I-!, mouse.'] Same as Echi-
are provided with movable spines. A characteristic ap- and bearing movable spines, and perforated in some places mys. h'afliier, 1840.
paratus of vessels, termed the ambulacral or water-vascu- for the emission of tube-feet; an oral and anal orifice Ecmnoneidse (e-ki-no-ne'i-de), n. pi. [NL., <
lar system, is present. It is composed of a ring round the always present, a convoluted intestine, a water-vascular Echinoneus -id(r.] + A
family of irregular sea-
pharnyx, from which proceed a number of radiating, ca- system, a blood- vascular system, and sometimes respira- Also
urchins, typified by the genus Echinoneus.
nals, commonly giving off csDcal appendages (Polian vesi- tory as well as ambulatory appendages. The perforated
cles), as well as branches which enter the retractile tube- plates are the ambulacra, alternating with imperfoi*ate in- written Echinonidw and Echinoneides.
feet, often furnished with a terminal disk or sucker, which terambulacral plates there are usually five pairs of each. Echinonemata (e-kl-no-ne'ma-tft), n.pl.
;
[NTj.,
with the spines are the organs of locomotion. The madre- The anus is dorsal or superior, the mouth ventral or infe- < Gr. ex'^og, s, hedgehog, +
v^fia, pi. vljfiaTa, a
with rior; the latter in many forms has a complicated internal
poric canal connects the i)haryngeal ring
rior.
the exte-
Pascoe, Zool. Class., p. 40. skeleton. The general an*angenient of parts is radiate or
thread, < vffj, spin.] A
subordinal or other
actinomeric, with meridional divisions of parts hut bilater- group of cer'atosilicious sponges, having spic-
Ecliinodenna (e-ld-no-d6r'ma), n. pi. [NL. ;
ality is recognizable in many adults, and perfectly expressed ules of two or more kinds, there l)eing smooth,
see Echinodermata.'] Same as Echinodermata. in the larval forms. The Echinoidea are divisible into He- double-pointed ones in the eei'atode, and rough,
Owen. gularia, Desmosticha, or Endocyclica. containing the ordi-
single-pointed ones standing partly exposed.
nary synmietricallyglobose forms, asCidaris, Echinus, and
ecMnodermal Ce-ld-no-d6r'mal), a. [< echino-
EchinotnHra ; and the h-regularia, Pcfalosticha, or Exocy- Echinoneus (ek-i-no'ne-us), n. [NL. < Gr. ixl- ,
derm + -«?.] Same as echinodermatous. clica, containiTig the cake-urchins and heart-urchins, or vog, a hedgehog, sea-urchin, -f- vioc E. neui.] =
The harder, spine-clad or echinodermal
species perplex
the most patient and persevering dissecitor by the extreme
the clypeastroids and spatangoids (respectively sometimes
erected into the ordei-s Clypeastrida and Spatangida) ; to-
A genus of irregular sea-urchins, of j:he family
complexity and diversity of their constituent parts. gether with the Paleozoic echinoids, which in some systems
Cassidulido!, or giving name to a family Echino-
Owen, Anat., x. constitute a third order, Palcechinoidea. Also Echinoida. neidce.
; ;
a hiil>;chog, -I- r/dj (jt/mk-), anything flat, a alternating with five with the spines removed, showmg the
mentary canal, and the head consisting of a
Having a circlet of spines flairs of perforate jilates, bare plates.
plate, etc., -f- -id^.'] protnisile proboscis armed with hooks, whence he plates studded with
on the madreporic plat e, the name. They are formidable, worm-like internal tubercles, and in life bearing movable spines. The per-
as a starfish: opposed parasites, with greirarina-like embryos, becoming encyst- forate plates are the ambulacra, emitting the tube-feet.
to anerhiiioplacid, ed like cestoid worms. Besides Echinorhynchru, tlio The mouth has a complicated system of plates, constittiting
family contains the gentia CoUopg. The species are nu- the object known, when detached, as Aristotle's lantern
f
Echinopora (ek-i-nop'6- merous. (which see, under lantern). A sea-urchin is comparable
rii), ». INL., < Gr. ix'- Echinorhynchus (e-ki-no-ring'kus), n. [NL., to a starfish with the five arms bent upward and their
vijf , a he<^hog, + v6poc, < Gr. ixn<K, a heilgehog, -t- piyx"^, snout.] The entls brought together in the center over the back of the
a passage: see pore.'] aiiiinal, and then soldered to^'ether throughout, with the
typical genus of the family EchinorhynchidtB. mollification of internal structure which such an arrange-
The typical genns of tiee cut tinder Acanthocephala. ment of the parts would necessarily entail.
stone-corals of the fam- 4. In arch., the convex projecting molding
The numerous species of the genus Echinorhynehvt live
FchiH9f«ra r»sftla. ily Eehinoporidce. La- principally in the alimentary canal of ditterent vertebrata of eccentric curve in Greek examples, support-
marck. the gut-wall may tie aa it were sown witli these animals. ing the abacus of the Doric capital hence, the ;
Krf'lhi::'>n. Echinothuria (e-ki-no-thu'ri-a), «. [NL., < the members of the Grecian order, only wanting the ele-
Echiiiops(f-ki'- Gr. » ififof, a
hedgehog, +
Bipiov, dim. of Oipa gance wliich the Greeks added to it.
J. Ferr/ugKon, Hist. Arch., I. 342, note.
nops), n. [NL., = E. door.] A
fossil genus of regular sea-
< Gr. ixivoi, a urcliins, giving name to a family Echinothuriidw. 6chiciuet6 (a-8he-k6-ta'), a. [F., formerly csc/ij-
hedgehog, + Echinothurida (e-ki-n6-thii'ri-<la), n.pl. [NL., (juetc, formed (with prefix cs-, 6- (< L. ex-), out,
ity),face.] l.A < Ech inothu rin +
-ida ] In Gegenbaur's system off, instead of des-, de-, d4- (< L. dt-), of, ofl')
.
genus of cyna- of classification, a subordinal group of desinos- from ddchiquete, pp. of dechiqucter, divide into
roid Comriosita: tichous Echinoidea, having a movable dermal checks, under influence of echiquier, a checker-
with a thistle- ScMmtfa Umlunlciu. skeleton and presenting some other points of board: see chcch^. The regular OF. form is
— ;
erty of reflecting soundsor of producing an echo. echoist (ek'o-ist), n. [< echo + -dst.] One who
of or pertaining to the Echiuroidea.
II. II. A member of the Echiuroidea.
— 6. [cap.'] [NL.] In 2od7., agenusof neurop- forms words by the imitation or echoing of
;
the chsetiferous gephyreans. They have a terminal hence, loudly vehemently; so as to excite attention and
;
by echoing or imitating sounds. See echoism.
anus, and a mouth at the base of a preoral proboscis. The response: chiefly used with applaud or similar words.
group contains the families Echiuridce and Sternagpidce, [Recent.]
1 would applaud thci to the very echo,
and is equivalent to a gephyrean order Choetifera. That would applaud again. [NL., < Gr. vxi), an
echolalia (ek-o-la'li-a), n.
The Echiuroidea or chsetiferous gephyrea present no Shak., Macbeth, v. 3. echo, +
babbling, < /.oMiv, babble.] In
7jiAia,
external segmentation of their elongated and contractile pathol., the repetition by the patient in a mean-
body; they have, however, in the young state, the rudi-
echo (ek'6), V. [< echo, «.] I. intrans. 1. To ingless way of words and phrases
emit an echo ; reflect or repeat sound give addressed to
ments of 15 nietameres. Claun, Zoology (trans.), I. 389. him. It occurs in certain nervous disorders.
;
chlorophyl: see chlorophyl, chlorophj/Uous.] a loud sound. formation not obvious.] A genus of ants called
Without chlorophyl. Braithwaite. Drums and trumpets echo loudly,
echo (ek'6), TO. pi. echoes (-6z). [Altered (after
;
Wave the crimson banners proudly.
L.) from earlier spelling; early mod. E. also Longfellow, The Black Knight (trans.).
hill. Sound being produced by waves or pulses of the production of, as sounds, words, or sentiments
air, when such waves meet an opposing surface, as a wall, imitate the sound or significance of.
they are reflected like light-waves (see reflection); the
sound so heard, as if originating behind the reflecting sur- Then gan triumphant Trompets sownd on hye.
face, is an echo. The echo of a sound returns U> the point That sent to heven the ecchoed report
whence the sound originated if the reflecting surface is Of their new joy, and happie victory.
at right anj.'les to a line drawn to it from that point. An Spenser, F. Q., I. xii. 4.
-
Ecitott drepattophorum.
oblique surface reflects the sound in another direction, so Those peals are echoed by the Trojan throng. a, soldier (line shows natural size) ; b, head of soldier, front
that it may be heard elsewhere, though not at the point Dryden, Mneii. view ; f, head of male, front view.
;;:; ; :
former of which are called mldien. They are carnivo- In dim eclipse, disastrous twilight sheds
rous, march in vast numbers, and are very destructive.
conformable to good sense, wholesome in prac- On half the nations, or with fear of change
tice, or recommended by other secondary Perplexes monarchs. Milton, P. L.,
eckle^, eccle (ek'l), n. [E. dial., also eecle,va,T. i. 597.
of iekle, ult. < AS. gicel, an icicle: see ickle, considerations; one who holds that opposing As when the sun, a crescent of eclipse,
icicle.'] 1. An icicle. —
2. j)l. The crest of a schools are right in their distinctive doctrines,
wrong only in their opposition to one another.
Dreams over lake and lawn, and isles and capes.
Tennyson, Vision of Sin, i.
cock To build eccles In the air, to build castles in
[Prov. Eng. in all uses.l In philosophy the chief groups of eclectics have been — (1)
the air. Wriffht. 2. Figuratively, state of obscuration ; an
any
«ckle^ (ek'i), n. [E. dial. Cf. eckle^.] A wood- those ancient writers, from tlie first century before Christ,
who, like Cicero, influenced by Platonic skepticism, held a overshadowing ; a transition from brightness,
pecker. [Prov. Eng.] composite doctrine of ethics, logic, etc., aggregated of Pla- clearness, or animation to the opposite state
«ckle-^, !'. 1. ;
pret. and pp. eckled, ppr. eckling. tonist. Peripatetic, Stoic, and even Epicurean elements
as, his glory has suffered an eclipse.
[A dial. var. of ettle.'] To aim intend design. ; ; (2) writers in the seventeenth century who, like Leibnitz,
mingled Aristotelian and Cartesian principles; <3) writ- All the posterity of our first parents suffered a perpetual
HalHiceU. [North. Eng.] ers In the eighteenth century who adopted in part the eclipse of spiritual life. Raleigh, Hist. World.
Eclair (a-klar'), n. [F., lit. lightning, < iclai- views of Leibnitz, in part tliose of Locke (4) Schelling and
;
Gayety without eclipse
rer, lighten, illumine, < L. exclarare, light up, others, who held beliefs derived from various idealistic,
Wearieth me. Tennyson, Lilian.
< ex, out, + elarare, make bright or clear: see pantheistic, and mystical pliilosophers (5) the scliool of
;
clear, r.] A
small oblong cake, filled with a
Cousin, who took a mean position between a philosophy How like the starless night of death
of experience and one of absolute reason. Our being's brief eclipse.
cream or custard, and glazed with chocolate or Even the eeleetia, who arose about the age of Angtis- When faltering heart and failing breath
sugar. tus, . were ... as slavish and dependent as any of
. .
Have bleached the fading lips !
eclaircise, v. t. See eclaireize. their brethren, since they sought for truth not in nature,
0. W. Holmes, Agnes.
6claircissenient(a-klar-se8'moh),n. [F. (=Pr. but In the several schools. He [Earl Hakon] was zealous, in season and out of sea-
esclarziment =
Sp. esclarecimiento Pg. esclare- ^ Hume, Kise of Arts and Sciences. son, to bringback those who in ih&t eclipse of the old faith
had either gone over to Christianity or preferred to '* trust
cimento), < eclaircir, clear up: see edairdze.'] My notion of an eclectic is a man who, without foregone in themselves," to what he considered the true fold.
conclusions of any sort, deliberately surveys all accessible
Explanation the clearing up of something not
;
modes of thought, and chooses from each his own " hortus Edinburgh Rev.
before understood. siccus" of definitive convictions. Annular, central, partial, penumbral, total eclipse.
>'ay, madam, you shall stay ... till he has nuule an J. Owen, Evenings with Skeptics, II. 331. See the adjectives.— Eclipse Of a satellite, the oliscu-
ration of it by the shadow of its primary opposed to an
MaircUseiHent of his love to you.
Wycheriey, Country Wife.
Specifically —
(a) A follower of the ancient eclectic philos-
ophy. (6) In the early cliurch, a Christian who believed
oecultation, ill which it is hidden by the body of the pri-
:
the doctrine of Plato to be conformable to the spirit of mary.— Eclipse of Ttaales, a total eclipse of the sup
Next morning I breakfasted alone with ilr. W[alpolel which took place .'SSS B. c, May 28th, during a battle be-
when we had all the eclairciattment I ever expected, and I the gospeL (c) In med., a practitioner of eclectic medi- tween the Medes and the Lydians, and which is stated to
cine, either ancient or modem an eclectic physician.
left him far better satisfied than I bad been hitherto. ;
have been predicted liyThales of Miletus.— Quantity Of
Gray, Letters, I. 124. eclectlcally (ek-lek'ti-kal-i), adv. of By way an eclipse, the number of digits eclipsed. See digit, 3.
choosing or selecting; in the manner of the eclipse (e-klips'), r. pret. and pp. eclipsed, -p-jx.
eclaircize (e-klSr'siz), eclair-
v. t.\ pret. and pp. ;
eclectic philosophers or physicians as an ec- ;
eclipsing. [< ME. eclipsen, < OF. eclipser, F.
cized, ppr. eclaircizing. [s F. iclairciss-, stem
of certain parts of Maircir (= Pr. esclarzir, es-
lectic. Mipser = Pr. Sp. Pg. eelipsar =
It. eclissare,
clarze:ir —
Sp. Pg. eselareeer), clear up with eclecticism (ek-lek'ti-sizm), n. [= F. iclecti- ecclissare; from the noun.] I. trans. 1. To
suffix, ult. < L. -eacere (see -esce, -ish^), < eclairer,
;
cise. [Rare.] Sensualism, Idealism, skepticism, mysticism, are all par- that the moone sometime was eclipsed twice in five moneths
tial and exclusive views of the elements of intelligence. space, and the sunne likewise in seven.
eclampsia (ek-lamp'si-ft), n. [= F. ^elampsie But each Is false only as it is Incomplete. They are all Holland, tr. of Pliny, it. 9.
= It. irlnmsia, < >fL. eeiamptia, < Gr. liuaftxl/tt, true in what they alBrm, all erroneous in what they deny.
a shilling forth, exceeding brightness, < ixM/i- Though hitherto opposed, they are, consequently, not In- 2. To overshadow ; throw in the shade ; ob-
ireiv, shine forth, < in, forth, /xt/nreiv, shine: + capable of coalition and, in fact, can only obtain their
; scure ; hence, to surpass or excel.
see lamp.] In ]>athoL, a flashing of light be-
consummation in a powerful ecUctieism a system which — Though you have all this worth, you hold some qualities
shall comprehend them alt.
fore the eyes; also, rapid coavukive motions. Sir W. HamUtoH, Edinburgh Rev.,
That do eclipse your virtues.
L. 201.
Beau, and Fl., King and No King, 1. 1.
The name ii applied to oonTolslons retembllng thoM of
epilepfly. but not of true epilepsy as, the tetan^tia of :
eclectism (ek-lek'tizm), n. [< F. ^clectisme = Another now hath to himself engross'd
childbirth. Also eclampty. Pg. eclectismo, < Or. inXeKTOc, picked out: see All power, and us eclipsed. Milton, P. L., v. 776.
eclampsic (ek-lamp'sik), a. A less correct eclectic and -ism.] Same as eclecticism. [Bare.] When he [Christ] was lifted up [to his cross], he did
irlamptic.
fortii "f
The classicists. Indeed, argue for that ecUetimn of taste there crucify the world, and the things of it, eclipse the
eclampsy (ek-lamp'si), n. Same as eeiamptia. which finds suggestive material wherever there is force lustre, and destroy the power, of all its empty vanities.
and beauty. D. G. Mitchell, Bound Together, iv. Bp. Atterbury, Sermons, II. xviii.
eclamptic (ek-lamp'tik), a. [= F. ielavtpttque
as eclampsia (eclampt-) + -I'c] 1. Pertaining Eclectus (ek-lek'tus), n. [NL., < Gr. inleicTdi, I, therefore, for the moment, omit all Inquiry how far the
Mariolatry of the early Church did indeed eclipse Christ.
to or of the nature of eclampsia: as, eclamptic picked out, select: see eclectic.] 1. genus A
convulsions; eelamptie idiocy. —
2. Suffering of trichoglossine parrots related to the lories,
Ruskin,
from eclampsia : as, an eclamptic patient. containing several species of the Philippine, H, intratts. To suffer an eclipse. [Bare.]
*clat (a-kla'), n. [P., < (fctater, burst forth, < OF. Malaccan, and Papuan islands, as E. linnm, The labouring moon
esclater, shine, ^esclater, burst, < OHO. slizan,
MHO. slizen, split, burst, O. sckleissen
E. polychtorus, etc. 2. [/. c]
AS. genus Eclectus. =
parrot of the — A
Eclipses at their charms. Milton, P. L., 11. 666.
S. Renown; glory.
eclipse (e-klips'), n. [< ME. eclips (more fre- an eclipse. 2. Pertaining to the apparent path —
quent in the abbr. form clips, clyppes, clyppus, of the sun in the heavens as, ecliptic constel- :
Yet the felat It gave was enoogh to torn the head of a etc. : see clips), < OF. eclipse^, eclipse
man leas presumptuous than Egmoat. Prfeott.
Pr. lations. =
eclipsis, eclipses, elipse Sp. Pg. eclipse It. = =
Thy full face in his oblique designe
eclectic (ek-lek'tik), a. and n. [= F. icUcHque eclisse, ecclisse, ecclissi, < L. eclipsis, < Gr. iiAet- Confronting Phoebus in th' Ecliptick line,
= Sp. eclSctico =
Pg. eclectico It. eclettico (cf. =
^(C, an eclipse, lit. a failing, forsaking, < kiOxl- And th' Earth between.
Sylvester, tr. of Du Bartas's Weeks, I. 4.
O. eklektisek =
Dan. eklektisk), < NL. eclecticus, xtiv, leave out, pass over, forsake, fail, intr.
< Or. inXiKTiKdi, picking out, selecting, < iitXc- leave off, cease, suffer an eclipse, < t/c, out, + Ecliptic conjunction, a conjunction in longitude of the
kt6c, picked out, < i«Xeye<v, pick out (= fi. eligere, moon with the sun, the former being within its ecliptic
Xeiirciv, leave.] 1. In astrcm., an interception limits. — Ecliptic digit, one twelfth part of the sun's or
pp. eiectus, > E. elect, q. v.), < tie, out, + ^lyttv, or obscuration of the light of the sun, moon, or moon's diameter, used as a unit in expressing the quantity
pick, choose: see legend.] I. a. Selecting; other heavenly body, by the intervention of an- of eclipses. — Ecliptic limits, the greatest distances at
choosing; not confined to or following any one other heavenly body either between it and the which the moon can be from her nodes (that is, from
ecliptic), if an eclipse of the sun or moon is to hap-
model or system, but selecting and appropri- eye or between it and the source of its illumi- the pen.
ating whatever is considered best in alt. nation. An eclipse of the sun is caused by the interven- n. 1. In a,Hron., a great circle of the heav-
n.
The American mind. In the largest sense eeleetic, strug- tion of the moon between it and the earth, the sun's disk ens in the plane of the earth's orbit, or that of
gled for universality, while it asserted freedom. being thus partially or entirely hidden an eclipse of the
moon Is occasioned bf the earth passing between it and the apparent annual motion of the sun among
;
Satan . . .
household concerns. [Obsolete or archaic] -/(('-.] Same as Harmonist, 4.
Took leave and toward the coast of earth beneath,
; And doth employ her economic art. economization (e-kon'''6-mi-za'shon), n. [<
Down from the ecliptic sped. Milton, P. L., lii. 740. And busy cai-e, her household to preserve. economize + -ation.'] the act or practice of
Sir J. Dairies, Immortal, of Soul. economizing, or managing frugally or to tho
My lady's Indian kinsnmii. unannounced,
Wltii half a score of swarthy faces came. 3. Pertaining to pecuniary means or concerns best effect the result of economizing econ-
; ;
His own, tho' keen and bold and soldierly, relating to or connected with income and ex- omy; saving. Also spelled economisation.
Sear'd by the close ecliptic, was not fair.
Tennyson, Aylmer's Field.
penditure: as, his economic management was [Rare.]
bad; ho was restrained by economic consider- To the extent that augmentation of mass results in a
2. A great circle drawn upon a terrestrial globe, ations; the economic branches of government. preater rettjntion of heat, it effects an ecoiwmization of
tangent to the tropics, it is sometimes said to " mark
the snn's annual path across the surface of the earth "
— 4. Of or pertaining to economies, or the pro- f(n-ci'. II. Spencer, Prin. of Biol., § 47.
duction, distribution, and use of wealth; relat- economize (f-kon'o-miz), v.; pret. and pp.
but since its plane is represented as fixed upon the earth,
the rotation of the latter will give it a gyratory motion in- ing to the means of living, or to the arts by economized, ppr. economizing. [= F. economi-
compatible with its representing any celestial appearance. which human needs and comforts are supplied: ser Sp. economizar =Pg. economisar =
It. eco- =
It may, however, prove convenient wlien a terrestrial globe
is used instead of a celestial one.
as, an economic problem; economic disturb- nomizzare D. cconomiseren = G. okonomisi- =
ances ; economic geology or botany. ren = Dan. okonotnisere ; as economy + -ize.'] I.
eclog, n. An abbreviated spelling of eclogue.
The economic ruin of Spain may be said to date from trans. To manage economically; practise econ-
ecloglte (ek'lo-jit), n. [< Gr. eK/.o/of, picked the expulsion of tlie Moriscoes. omy in regard to ; treat savingly or sparingly
out (< K?-r)'£(i','pick out, choose), + -ite^.j The J. Fiske, Evolutionist, p. 245.
as, to economize one's means or strength ho ;
name given by Haiiy to a rock consisting of 5. Characterized by freedom from wastefulness, economized his expenses.
a crystalline-granular aggregate of oinphaoite extravagance, or excess frugal saving spar-
; ;
To manage and economize the use of circulating me-
;
(a grantUar, grass-green variety of pyroxene) ing: as, economic use of money or of material. dium. Walsfi.
with red garnet. With these essential constituenU [In this sense more commonly economical.]
cyanite (di8tnene)is often associated, and, less commonly, II. intrans. To practise economy; avoid
silvery mica, quartz, and pyrites. This is one of the most The charitable few are chiefly they waste, extravagance, or excess be sparing in ;
beautiful of rocks, and of rather rare occurrence. It is Whom Fortune places in the middle way outlay as, to economize in one's housekeeping,
:
found in the .\Ips. in the Fichtelgebirge in Bavaria, in the Just rich enough, with economic care.
To save a pittance, and a pittance spare. or in the expenditure of energy.
Erzgebirge in Bohemia, and also in Norway. It occurs in
lenticular masses in the older gneisses and schists. To the Ilarte, Eulogius. He does not know how to economize. Smart.
variety occurring at .Syra in Greece, consisting largely of = S3rn. 6. Saving, sparing, careful, thrifty, provident.
cyanite or disthene, the name cyanite rock or disthene rock Also spelled economise.
has been given. Also spelled eklogite. economical (e-ko- or ek-o-nom'i-kal), a. [< economizer (e-kon'o-mi-z^r), n. 1. One who
economic + -al.] Same as economic. The form
eclo^e [Early mod. E. also eclog, economical is more common than economic in sense 5.
(ek'log), n. economizes; one who uses money, material,
and eglogtie, wijlogtie; =
P. eglogue, eclogue, now
This economical misfortune [of ill-assorted matrimony].
time, etc., economically or sparingly. 2. In —
eglogue, Mogue =
Sp. ecloga Pg. egloga =
It. = Milton, Divorce. engin., an apparatus by which economy, as of
egloga, ecloga =
G. ekloge Dan. Sw. eklog, <= There was no economical distress in England to prompt
fuel, is effected specifically, one in which waste ;
li. ecloga, < Gr. iKloyij, a selection, esp. of poems, the enterprises of colonization. Palfrey. heat from a boiler or furnace is utilized for
"elegant extracts" (cf. iii>j}yoQ, picked out), heating the feed-water.
But the econwnical and moral caiises that were destroy-
< iiikcyciv, pick out, select, < tx, out, + 'keyeiv, ing agriculture in Italy were too strong to be resisted. Also spelled economiser.
pick, choose ; at. eclectic. The term came to bo Lecky, Europ. Morals, I. 284. economy (e-kon'o-mi), n. pi. economies (-miz). ;
applied esp. to a collection of pastoral poems The life of the well-off people is graceful, pretty, dain- [Formerly also economic, cecononiy, eeconomie
(with special ref. to Virgil's pastoral poems tily-ordered, hospitable ; but it has a simplicity which in- F. economic Sp. economia =
Pg. It. econo- = =
(Bucolica), which were published under tho cidentally makes it comparatively economical.
Arch. Forbes, Souvenirs of some Continents, p. 68.
mia D. economic G. okonomie Dan. oko- = = =
title of Eclogce, selections '), whence the false
' nomi Sw. ekonomi (D. and Sw. after F.), < L. =
spellings eglogue, wglogue (F. Eglogue, etc.), in economically (e-ko- or ek-o-nom'i-kal-i), adv. ceconomia, < Gr. oiKovo/ua, the management of a
an endeavor to bring in the pastoral associa- 1. As regards the production, distribution, and household or family, or of the state, the public
tions of Gr. aj.^ (ah/-), a, goat.] In poetry, a use of wealth ; as regards the means by which revenue, < oikov6/io(, one who manages a house-
pastoral composition, in which shepherds are human needs and comforts are supplied. —
2. hold, a manager, administrator, <okof, a house,
introduced conversing with one another; a With economy; with frugality or moderation. household (= L. vicus, a village, > ult. E. wick,
bucolic as, the eclogues of Virgil.
: economics (e-ko- or ek-o-nom'iks), n. [For- uich, a village, etc. see wick'^), vcftecv, deal : +
Some be of opinion, and the ctdefe of those who haue merly also economicks ; pi. of economic (see out, distribute, manage see )io«(cl.] 1. Tho :
written in this Art among the Latines, that the pastorall -ics), after Gr. to, omovofuKa, neut. pi. (also fem. management, regulation, or supervision of
Poesie which we conmioidy call by the name of Erilogite sing, ij o'lKovofUKr/, sc. rix''"ij art), the art of house- means or resources; especially, the manage-
and Bucolick, a tearme brought in by the Sicilian Poets, hold management.] 1. The science of house- ment of the pecuniary or other eoncei'ns of a
should be the first of any other.
I'uttenham, Arte of Eng. Poesie, p. 30. hold or domestic management. [Obsolete or household as, you are practising bad economy ; :
archaic]
eclosion(e-kl6'zhon), n. [< F. eclosion, < 4clos-, wealth, its production, distribution, etc. po-
—
2. The science which treats of their domestic economy needs reform.
Fain. lie keeps open house for all comers.
;
stem of certain parts of eclore, emerge from the litical economy. Wid. He ought to be very rich, whose oecononn/ is so
egg, < L. excludere, shut out: see exclude, exclxi- profuse. Mrs. Centlivre, The Artifice, iv.
The best authors have chosen rather to handle it (edu-
sion, and cf. closed, close^.'] The act of emerging
from a covering or concealment; specifically,
cation] in their politicks than in their osconomicks.
Sir U. Wotton, Reliquise, p. 78.
Hence —
2. A frugal and judicious use of
money, material, time, etc. tho avoidance of ;
in entom., the escape of an insect from the pupa- Not only in science, but in politicks and economics, in or freedom from waste or extravagance in tho
or chrysalis-ease. the less splendid arts which administer to convenience
management or use of anything frugality in ;
eclysis (ek'li-sis), n. [< Gr. ia/.mtg, a lowering and enjoyment, much information may be derived, by
careful search, from times which have been in general the expenditure or consumption of money, ma-
of the voice through three quarter-tones, a re- neglected, as affording nothing to repay the labour of terials, etc.
at-
lease or deliverance, < eK/.vew. release, < ex, out, tention. V. Knox, Essays, No. 73, I have no other notion of economy than that it is the
+ Ivuv, loose.] In Gr. music, the lowering or Among minor alterations, I may mention the substitu- parent of liberty and ease. Swift, To Lord Bolingbroke.
flatting of a tone opposed to ecbole. : tion for tlie name of Political Economy of the single conve- Nature, with a perfect economy, tni-ns all forces to ac-
ecod (f-kod'), interj. [One of the numerous nient term Economics. Jevons, Pol. Econ. (2d ed.), Pref. count. //. Spencer, Social Statics, p. 388.
variations, as egad, begad, bedad, etc., of the economisation, economise, etc See economi- Another principle that serves to throw light on our in-
oath by God."] By God; egad: a minced oath. zation, etc. qtiiry is thatwhich has been called the principle of econ-
[Now rare.] economist (e-kon'o-mist), n. [Formerly also
omy, viz., that an effect is pleasing in proportion as it i»
attained by little effort and simple means.
£cod, you're lu the right of it. (economist; F. economiste =
Sp. Pg. It. econo- = J. Ward, Encyc. Brit., XX. 70.
Sheridan (?), The Camp, i. 1. mis^a; as economy + -ist.'] 1. One who man-
3. Management, order, or arrangement in gen-
Ecod ! how the wind blows what a grand time we shall ages pecuniary or other resources; a manager
eral; the disposition or regulation of the parts
I
have S. Judd, Margaret, i. 14. in general, with reference to means and ex-
or functions of any organic whole ; an organ-
econome (ek'o-nom), 11. [= F. 4conome Sp. penditure or outlay. = ized system or method : as, the internal economy
ecdnomo =
Pg. It. ecoiwmo, steward, financial Very few people are pood oscvnoinists of their fortune, of a nation ; the economy of the work is out of
manager, =
D. econoom =
G. iikonom, husband- and still fewer of their time. Chesterfield, Letters, ccxvi. joint.
=
man, steward, Dan. iikonom Sw. ekonom (D. = It would be madness to expect happiness from one
who has been
, . .
e converse (e kon-ver'so). [L., lit. from the H. II. An ecphractic drug. 1. Astate in which the mind is exalted or lib-
converse : e, ex, from
converso, abl. of conver-
; ecphroniat (ek-lro'ni-a), n. [NL., < Gr. irnpiMV, erated as it were from the body a state in which ;
siim, iieut. of convertug, converse: see conrerse^, out of one's mind, crazy, < iK, out of, + 9P7v, the functions of the senses are suspended by the
a.] On the contrary; on the other hand. mind.] In pathol., insanity. contemplation of some extraordinary or super-
6corch6 (a-kor-sha'), «. [P., lit. flayed, pp. ecphyma (ek-fi'm&), n. ; pi. ecphymata (ek-fim'- natural object, or by absorption in some over-
of ecorclier, OF. escorcher, flay, > ult. t. scorch : a-til). [NL., < Gf. iK^v/ia, an eruption of pim- powering idea, most frequently of a religious
see scorch.] Inpaintiiig and sculp., a subject, J>le8, (. cKipieoftai, grow out, < in, out, + (jiieailai, nature; entrancing rapture or transport.
man or animal, flayed or exhibited as deprived grow.] In pathol., a cutaneous excrescence, as
Wliether what we call ecstasy be not dreaming with our
of its skin, go that the muscular system is ex- a wart. eyes open, I leave to be examined. Locke.
posed, for the purposes of study. Ecphymotes (ek-fi-mo'tez), 11. [NL., < Gr. Wlien the mind is warmed with heavenly thoughts, and
NL. "ccorticatus, iKtfviia, an eruption of pimples: see ecphyma.] wrought up into some degrees of holy ecetasy, it stays not
ecorticate (e-kor'ti-kat), a. [<
< L. e- priv. +
cortex (cortic-), bark : see corti- A genus of pleurodont lizards, of the family there, but communicates these impressions to the body.
Iguanidce, having a short and flattened form, Bp. Atterbury, Sermons, II. xix.
cate.] In hot., without a cortical layer: applied
lichens. and large pointed cariuate scales on the thick The Neoplatonists, though they sometimes spoke of
especially to civic virtues, regarded the condition of ecstasy as not only
tail otherwise generally as in Polychrus. Fitz-
ifcossaise (a-ko-saz'), «. [F., fem. of £eossais, :
transcending but including all, and that condition could
.Siiiti'h: see Scotch^.] 1. A
species of rustic inf/cr, 1S26. Also spelled £cp/ii»io?<?«. only be arrived at by a passive life.
dauce of Scotch origin. 2. Music written for — ecphysesia (ek-fi-ze'sis), n. [NL., < Gr. cKt^imj- Lecky, Europ. Morals, I. 350.
such a dauce, or in imitation of its rhythm. 3. — aiQ, emission of the breath, < Uifvaav, blow out,
breathe out, snort, < Ik, out, + ^vaav, blow,
2. Overpowering emotion or exaltation, in
In therapeutics, the douche ficossaise or Scotch which the mind is absorbed and the actions are
douche, alternating hot and cold douches. breathe.] h\ pathol., a quick breathing. controlled by the exciting subject; a sudden
The alternation of hot and cold douches, which for some Ecpleopodidse (ck-ple-o-pod'i-de), n. pi. [NL., access of intense feeling. Speclflcally — (a) Joyful,
unknown reason has got the name of Feouaite, Is a very < F.rpUapus + -i<f<E.] A family of ptychopleu- delightful, or rapturous emotion extravagant delight as, ; ;
powerful remedy from the strong action and reaction which ral or cyclosaurian lizards. Also Ecpleopoda. the ecttwty ot love he gazed upon the scene with ecstasy.
;
Ecpantheiia (ek-pan-the'ri-a), 11. [XL. (HUb- suppuration, < tKitviuv, suppurate, < «, out, + tion distraction as, the very ecstasy of grief an ecstasy
; : ;
ner, 1816), so called as being spotted, < Gr. U, -vtiv, suppurate, < t:vov, pus.] In pathol., a of fear.
out (here intensive), navOiip,+panther or leop- skin-disease with purulent or serous effusion Better be with the dead . . .
ecphonesia (ck-fo-ne'sis), «. pi. ecphoneses bleached, raw, applied to linen, silk, etc., OF. ecstatic (ek-stat'ik). a. and n. [Formerly ec-
;
(-SCZ). [XL., < dr. Utpuvt/air, pronunciation, escru, < es-, hereunmeaning, + cru, raw, crude, statick, extatick; F. extatiqtte Sp. cxtdtico = =
an exclamation. < fKiV"", pronounce, cry out: < L. crudus: see crude.] 1. Unbleached: ap- Pg. extatieo It. estatico, < Gr. haTariKSi, < = =
see ecphonema] 1. In rhet., a figure which ]>lied to textile fabrics. 2. Having the color eKOTaat^, ecstasy: see — ecstasy.] I. a. 1. Per-
consists in the use of an exclamation, question, of raw silk, or of undyed and unbleached linen taining to or resulting from ecstasy; entran-
or ot%r form of words used interjectionally to hence, by extension, having any similar shade of cing; overpowering.
" ; :: :
in »/, as iu the line [NL., < Gr. fxrof, outside, + x"vr/, a funnel see :
To gain Pescennius one employs his schemes
One grasps a Cecrops in eatatick dreanis. MonstrK?nhorrend«Mj, informcingens, cui lumen aiienip- cho)i€.^ An ectochone,
*"" Vtrffil, ^neid, III. 60S. ectOchone (ek'to-kon), n.
Pope, To Addison. [< NL. ectochona.
The Sonnets (Mrs. Browning's] reveal to us that Love ecthoraea, «. Plural of ecthorceum. q. v.] The outer division of a chone.
which is the most ecttatic o£ human emotions and worth ecthoraeal, ecthoreal (ek-tho-re'al), a. \< ec- In many sponges (Geoilia, Stelletta) the cortical domes
all other gifts in life. Stednwn, Vict. PoeU. p. 138.
tlwrmim + -(,l.:\ Pertaining to an ecthorieum are constricted near tlieir communication with the sub-
dermal cavity (subcortical crypt) by a transveree muscu-
2. Affected by ecstasy; enraptured; entranced, as, an ccthoraal protrusion. lar sphincter, which defines an outer division or ectochone
By making no responses to ordinary stimuli, the fcsdXic ecthoraBUm (ek-tho-re 'um), n.; pi. ecthorcea from an inner or endochone. Jincyc. Brit., XXII. 415.
subject sliows that he is "not himself. (-a). [NL., < Gr. CK, out, out of, + dnpalof, cou- ectoclinal (ek-to-kli'nal), a.
//. Spetuer, Prin. of Sociol., § 77.
[< Gr. ckto^, out-
taming the seed, < dopoq, seed, semen.] In :ooL, side, -1- K?.iveiv, lean: see clinic, clinode.)
Ib,
n. ». 1. One subject to ecstasies or raptures; tlje thread of a thread-cell; the stinging-hair 6o<., having the clinode (hymenium) and spores
an extravagant enthusiast. [Rare.] of a enida a cnidocil. ; Also ecthoreum. See exposed upon the surface of the receptacle. Le
Old Hereticks and idle Ec$taticks, such as the very primi- cut under cnida. Maout and Decaisne, Botany (trans.), p. 938.
tive times were intlnitely pestred withal. The mner wall of the sac [cnida] is produced into a ectOCOelian /„!, fA o;;'i; „„N a
,«+v,«mHo,. (ek-to-se'li-an), „ [< Gr. f((r<if, out-
Bp. Gauden, Tears of the Church, p. 201. slieath terminating in along thread (MjAorctwn); this is oiilo l,^"
n' no
" "
usually twisted in many coils round its sheath, and nils "^'^^K^
-I- in,5,v,i,
i^of-'ov, a
2. pi. Ecstasy ; rapturous emotion. up the open end of the sac. Pascoe, Zool. Class., p. 16. tricular; situated outside of the cavities of the
ecstatical (ek-stat'i-kal), a. [Formerly extati- brain : applied to that part of the corpus stri-
cal; < ecstatic +
-a?.] Same as ecstatic. ecthyma (ek-tlu'ma), n.; pi. ecthymata (ek-
atum (the nucleus lenticularis) which appears
thim'a-ta). [NL., < Gr. Indv/ia, a pustule, pap-
With other extaticail furies, and religious frencies, with embeddedin the wall of the hemisphere. Wilder.
ula, < ckUvciv, break out, as heat or humors, < ea,
ornaments of gold and jewels. Purchas, Pilgrimage, p. 66. ectocoelic (ek-to-se'lik), a. [As ecioccel-ian -(-
out, -I- dbetv, rage, boil, rush.] In pathoL, a -ic] Situated on the outside of the common
ecstatically (ek-stat'i-kal-i), adv. In an ec- large pustule intermediate in character between
cavity of a ccelenterate.
static manner rapturously ; ravishingly.
; a furuncle or boil and an ordinary pustule.
ectad (ek'tad), adv. [< Gr. without, out- A misleading appearance of ectoccelic septa is produced
t/crof, ecthymiform (ek-thi'mi-f6rm), a. [< Gr. eKdv/ia by the fact that some pairs of mesenteries die out after a
side, -I- -arfS, < L. ad, to. ] In anat., to or to- (iKdvfiaT-), a pustule, papula (see ecthyma), + very short course.
ward the outside or exterior; outward; out- L. forma, form.] Having the form of or re- O. H. Fmcler, Micros. Science, XXVIII. 5.
wardly. sembling an ecthyma. ectocon(^le (ek-to-kon'dil), n. [< Gr. hrdc, out-
Tlie dura mater may be described as ectad of the brain, ecto-. [NL. ecto-, < Gr. cKrdg, adv. and prep., side, -1- E. condyle.'] The outer or external con-
but entad of the cranium. without, outside (opposed to hrog, within: see dyle of a bone, on the side away from the body
Wilder and Gage, Anat. Tech., p. 27. eiito-), < f/c, out, + quasi-superl. suffix -ro-f.] said especially of the condyles at the lower
ectal (ek'tal), a. [< Gr. ckt6(, without, -t- -a?.] A prefix in words (chiefly biological) of Greek end of the humerus and of the femur respec-
In anat., outer; external; superficial; periph- origin, signifying outside, without, outer, ex- tively: opposed to ewtocowdyZe. Seeepicondyle.
'
The suggestion to employ ental and ectat was welcomed, Ectozoa, external parasites: opposed to endo-, outside, -I- NL. coracoideus, the coracoid.] In
and they were published |by Wilder iu 1881]. «« to-- the dipnoan fishes, the element of the shoulder-
Wilder and Gage, Anat. Tech., p. 27. ectobasidium (ek"t6-ba-sid'i-um), n. pi. ecto- girdle outside of that with which
; the pectoral
ectasia (ek-ta'si-a), n. [NL. : see ectests.] 1. basidia (-ii). [NL., < Gr. eKrdg, outside, + NL. limb articulates. Also called clavicle,
Eetasis. — 2. Aneurism Alveolar ectasia. Same
as vegicidar emphysema (which see, under emphysema).
hasidium, q. v.] In mycol., a basidium that is ectocranial (ek-to-kra'ni-al), a. [< Gr. inrdi,
externally placed, as^in Mymenomycetes. Le outside, + /(pawov, skull: see crani«?».] Of or
eetasis (ek'tfi-sis), n. [LL., < Gr. eicraaiq, ex- Maout and Decaisne, Botany (trans.), p. ,.954. pertaining to the outer walls or surface of the
tension, < laxeivuv (= L. exten-d-ere), extend, < Ectobia (ek-to'bi-ii), «. [NL., < Gr. iiiT6(,
cKTi out- skull ; forming a part of the cranial parietes, as
«, out, + Tcivew, stretch: see extend, tend^.J 1. side, -I- /3t'of, life.] A
genus of cursorial orthop- a bone.
In ajw. orthoepy and pros. : (a) The pronuncia- terous insects, of the family Slattidce, or cock- There is a large bony tract between the squamosal
. . .
tion of a vowel as long. (6) The lengthening roaches, containing a number of small species, and the large interparietal, which is not one of the ordi-
or protraction of a vowel usually short. See as E. germanica, the croton-bug (which see) nary ectocranial bones.
diastole. — 2. Inane, rhet.: (a) The use of along sometimes synonymous with Blatta in a re-
W. K. Parker, Proc. Eoy. Soc, XXXVIII. 135.
vowel or syllable in a part of a clause or sen- stricted sense. Westwood, 1839. ectocuneifonu (ek-to-ku'ne-i-f6rm), a. and n.
tenee where it will produce a special rhythmical ectoblast (ek'to-blast), n. [< Gr. hurdg, outside. [< NL. ectocuneiforme, q. v.] I. a. In anat.,
effect. (6) The use of a form of a word longer + p.aaTog, a bud, germ.] 1. In hiol., the outer- pertaining to the outermost cuneiform bone;
than that commonly employed. This is gener- most recognizable structure of a cell a cell- eetosphenoid. ;
ally called paragoge. wall, in any way distinguished from mesoblast Union of the navicular and cuboid, and sometimes the
ectaster (ek-tas't6r), n. [NL. < Gr. eicT6(, with- or other more interior structures. The ecto- ectocuneiiform bone, of the tarsus.
,
W. H. Flower, Encyc. Brit, XV. 430.
out, -1- aarr/p, star.] Akind of sponge-spicule. blast is to a cell what the epiblast is to a more
Sollas. —
complex organism. 2. In embryol., the outer II. n. The outermost one of the three cunei-
ectatic (ek-tat'ik), a, [< Gr. cKrard^, capable primary layer in the embryo of any metazoan form or wedge-shaped bones of the distal row
of extension, < eKTelveiv, extend: see ectasia.] animal; the epiblast; the ectoderm. See cut of tarsal bones the eetocuneiform or eetosphe- ;
Exhibiting or pertaining to eetasis under Mastoccele. noid bone of the foot. See cut underfoot.
ectene, ectenes (ek'te-ne, -nez), n. [< Gr. mre- ectoblastic (ek-to-blas'tik), a. [< ectoblast +
ectocuneiforme (ek-to-lrii"ne-i-f6r'me), n. ; pi.
wfc (LGr. also enrevr/, n.), prop, adj., extended, ic. ] Pertaining to the ectoblast ; consisting of ectocuneiformia (-mi-a). [Nt., < Gr. f/irof, with-
continued (sc. iaeaia, al-r^aig, evxi, or npoaevx>/, ectoblast; ectodermal. out, -f- NL. cuneifor'me, the cuneiform bone.]
supplication, prayer), < CKTuvew, stretch out, ectoblioLUUS (ek-tob-li'kwus), «. pi. ectobliqui
;
Same as eetocuneiform.
prolong: see eetasis and extend.] In the Gr. (-kwi). [NL., < Gr. ckt6^, outside, -f L. obli- ectocyst (ek'to-sist), n. [< Gr. IktSq, outside,
Ch., one of the litanies recited by the deacon quus, oblique.] In anat., the external oblique -t- Kvarig, a bladder: see cyst.] In Polyzoa, the
and choir, it follows the gospel, and is introduced by muscle of the abdomen, the obliquus abdomi- external tegumentary layer of the coenceeium,
the words '*Let us all say with our whole soul, and with nis extemus. Also called extrobliquus. See cut forming the common cell or cyst in which each
our whole mind let us say." The choir responds with under muscle. individual zooid is contained. See the extract,
Kyrie Eleison, once after this invitation and the first peti-
tion, and thrice after the other petitions. See litany. ectocardia (ek-to-kar'di-a), «. [NL., < Gr. ck- and cuts under Polyzoa and PlumateUa,
ectental (ek-ten'tal), a. [< Gr. t/trdf, without, t6(, outside, -t- napdia, heart.] In teratol., a mal- As a rule the colonies [of polyzoans] possess a homy or
parchment-like, frequently also calcareous, exoskeleton,
+ evTdg, within, +"-al.] In embryol., of or per- formation in which the heart is out of its nor- which arises from the hardening of the cuticle around the
taining to the outer and the inner layer of a gas- mal position individual zooids. Each zooid is accordingly surrounded
trula: specifically said of the line of primitive ectocarotid (ek"t6-ka-rot'id), n. [< Gr. tard^, by a very regular and symmetrical case — the ectocyst or
juncture of the ectoderm and endoderm cir- outside, + E. carotid.] In anat., the external cell through the opening of which the anterior part of
;
clius and typus of Constans II. were anathematized. Having external genitals, or developing sexual lenterate.
Encyc. Brit., XV. 646. products from the ectoderm, as a hydromedu- The ovary bursts its ectodermal covering.
ecthlipsis (ek-thlip'sis), n. [LL., < Gr. IkOX san of or pertaining to the_ _Ectocarpew. W. B. Carpenter, Micros., § 515.
V'f, ecthUpsis, lit. a squeezing out, < eiMXpuv, Ectocarpus\ek-t6-ki&'pus), n. [NL.: see ecto- ectodermic (ek-to-dfer'mik), a. [< ectoderm +
squeeze out, < £K, out, + e>.i/fev, squeeze. Cf. carpous.] In 6o<., the principal genus of -Ecto- -«.] Same a» ectodermal,
elmon.] In Gr. and Lat. gram., omission or carpacew, including a largo number of olive- ecto-entad (ek"t6-en'tad), adv. [<,Gr. h-rdg,
suppression of a letter ; especially, in Lat. brown fllamentous species, many of which grow ivithout, + fvrof, within. -t- -nrfS. Cf. ectad, en-
gram., elision or suppression in utterance of a, attached to larger algae. tad,] In anat., from without inward. [R^'e.}
ecto-«ntad 183»
Apart may be divided by cutting either eeto-mtad, ectropic
from primaries, a long cuneate UU
of 12 tapering acuminate
without inward, or ento-ectad, from witliin outward.
feathers, wing-coverts with black spots,
partv?colorea tail-
ectosome (ek'to-som), «. [< Gr. «r<if, outside,
Wilder and Gage, AnaL Tecll., p. 27. feathers, an iridescent neck, and the
sexes distinguishable
oy color, h. migratorius is the common wild
+ au,m, body.] In sponges, the outer region
ecto-ental (ek'to-en'tal), a. Same as ectental. piseon or forming the roof and walls of the
The mesoderm puws out from the passenger-pigeon of North America. See cut
under ^^ subdermai
ecloental line. senger-pigeon.
vas- chambers, composed of ectoderm and
C. S. Minol, .Medical News, XLIX. a super-
249. ficial layer of endoderm;
ectoplasm (ek'to-plazm), n. [< Gr. £/c7<if, with- the cortex: distin-
ectogastrocnemius (ek-to-gas-trok-ne'mi-us), out, -I- a thingformed, < nMaaetv, form.] guisned trom choanosome and endosome.
TT/jia/ia,
«. : pi. cctiHiastroaiemii (-i).
[NL., < Gr. iia-d^, 1. In zool., the exterior protoplasm or sarcode " ™''*'^''= '"y^"' between a retic-
outside, +
-,aaTi/t), stomach,
Kvijiiri, the lower + of a cell; the ectosarc: applied to the ul Jt'ion''n?ZT""'
ulation '"T
of ectosome on the one s de and of endoderm and
'""'°''^™' ""«*
leg, tibia.]The outer gastroenemial muscle, denser mesoderm, i. e., endosoiiie, on the other
exterior substance of inf usorians and
or outer head of the gastrocnemius the gas- other uni- SollcK, Encyc. Brit., XXII. 415
; cellular organisms, or of a free
trocnemius cxtemus. See cut under muscle. protoplasmic ectosphenoid (ek-to-sfe'noid), n.
body, as a zoospore. [< Gr. Ut6c
ectpgenous (ek-toj'e-nus), a. without, -I- (T^TvoEid^f, wedge-shaped:
[< Gr. exrof, out- In the Infusoria, which are covered see sphe-
side, + --jniK, producing: see -genous.'] Origi- by a firm cuticle nota.] bame as ectocuneifortn. [Rare 1
nating or developed outside of the host; exter- """^ "' ^"«^°''« (ei.doplasm) ectosporOUS (ek-to-sp6'rus),
whTh f.
which is HUH'„"Tf'™"Il:"'*
distinct from the more compact
peripheral layer
a. [< Gr. etcrdc,
nally parasitic : opposed to endogenous. of sarcode (.ectoplasm). Claus, 2^1o^(trans ), I 54!^
outside, + seed: see spore.] Forminff
oTTopoc,
Some of the pathogenous bacUria are accustomed to spores exteruaUy exosporous.
2. In 6o<. , the outer hyaUne layer
or film of the
;
derelope and multiply without the body, while others ectOSteal (ek-tos'te-al), a. [< Gr. hroc,
protoplasmic mass within a ont-
only do so within it The former kind we may describe
as tctogenoui, the latter as endogenous. ectoplasBUC (ek-to-plaz'mik),
cell. side, +
oGT(ov, bone, -t- -al]
Relating to or
a. [< ectoplasm situated on the outside of a bone;
ZiegUr, Pathol. Anat (trans.), i. § 203. + -ic.J Pertaining to or consisting of ecto- from without inward, as a growth of
proceeding
ectoglntaeus (ek-to-gl6'te-us), n.; pi. cctoglutwi plasm. bone,
ectosteally (ek-tos'te-al-i), adv. In an ectos-
(-i). [XL., < Gr. t/crof, without, + jXotn-of, the ectoplastic (ek-t«-plas'tik), a. Same as ecto- teal manner or position.
rump, buttocks: see glutwus, gluteal.'] Inanat, plasmtc.
ectostosiS (ek-tos-to'sis), n. [NL., < Gr. hrSc,
the outer or great gluteal muscle; the glute- "'*''' cortical substance (which is outside, -I- o<7Tcov, bone, -I- .osis.]
us maximus. Also ectogluteus. See cut under nJ^*fnl?*'*'!''*"i'",
not a frequent or striking phenomenon
in tissue-cells) may
That form
of ossification of cartilage which
muscle.
^Holfff fh " ^" r'"'^^"' ('• peripheral) modifl
the protoplasii,, comparable to the
« immediately under the perichondrium
begins in or
ectoglnteal (ek-to-glo't^-al), a. [< ectogluUeus (central)
. ,i^^?^ entoplastic also ;
mo<iitkation which produces a nucleus. growth of bone from without inward;
+ -al.] Pertaining to the eetoglutaeus. Also £. Jt Lanketter, Encyc. Brit., XIX. 833. teal ossification.
perios-
ectogluUeal.
ecto;>opliteal (ek'to-pop-Ut'e-al), a. ectothecal (ek-to-the'kal), a. [< Gr. f/cr<if, out-
ectolecithal (ek-to-les'i-thal), a. [< Gr. Urdc r< Gr
outside, -I- /i«&f, yolk, + -a/.] In embryol'
«rof, otitside + Upoples (po'plit.),
hock, knee': side, + drjK^, case: see theca.] In hot, having
seepop/iteaZ.] In anat., situated upon thecffl or asci exposed, as in
discomycetoul
noting those ova which have the food-yolk the outer
ripheral in positiou, and thus exterior to the
pe- side of the popliteal space or
region : as, the ec- tungi and gj-mnocarpous lichens; discomyce-
topophteal nerve. tous; gymnocarpous.
formative yolk. The cleavage or segmentation is
con- Ectoprocta (ek-to-prok'tS),
sequently lonftned at first to the inner parts of
the ovum
n. pi. [NL., neut. ectotriceps (ek-tot'ri-seps), n. : pi. ectotricepites
and it 18 only in later stages, when the foodyolk
has shift-
pi. otectoiiroctus.] A division of the Foluzoa (ek-tot-n-sep'i-tez). [fo,., < Gr. itcrdc, out-
by hav- side, -I- Nh. triceps.] In anat., the outer head
ed to the center, that the cleavage becomes established by Nitsche, characterized
peripheral
*° example. See centroUeUkcU, ing tue anus outside of the circlet of or external division of the triceps muscle
laoUMI^ tentacles-
arm, considered as a distinct muscle.
of the
opposed to Endoprocta. See the extract. Also ex-
The first proce»«««of legmenUtion In these at lint
Ui^hal ova are withdrawn from obMnration, dnco erto- tra triceps.
they the eiidocyst constats 01 two
take place In the centre of an egg corered by I.^J""!
layers, an^'•'^•^<'i
outer and Inner; of which the former Ectozoa (ek-to-z6'a), n. pi.
a supertlcial [NL., pi. of ecto-
layer of food yelk. Claru, Zo«logy (trmn«.ri. ll" rege«nutlve of the ectoderm in other anirals is the zoon, q. v.] External parasites in
T^e general, as
Ectolithia (ek-ta-lith'i-S), n. pi. [NL., < Gr ck- fl^ .h?„
Perivisceral cavity, and is re-
''*,ri.*''' "'i''"
over the tentacular
distingmshed from Entozoa, or internal para-
ru^, outside + >.,6iof, Stone.] Those radiolari- Ifc^ i^T?nl'";K"r.'^'r™""'''^'
•heath and Into the interior of the tentacula, whence
it ^}ht^l
other '"',"\*''n
or £pizoa, are Ectozoa, as are
flsh-Iice,
ans which have an external silicious 8 continued on to the alimentary canal, of which lice, ticks, fleas, etc. The term is a vague one, hav-
skeleton it forms
or exoskeleton distinguished from
: Endolithia.
'"'';»'?'«''' The endoderi,, which lines
inme'n.T,""canal is of course
alimentary thi f.Vm ?
tural affinity
''*'"''^.?:'^"'''™""' ""'•
among
implying no struc-
the creatures designated by it AUo
Only, a few (radiolarians)
, remain naked
-."-J ...utMui and without
ii&Acuaiiu wiinout nmi
firm oral opening, with the ectoderm.
continuous, through the
called ectoparantes. "
deposiU: as a rule, the soft body ectozoan (ek-to-zo'an), n. [< Ectozoa
skeleton which either Ilea entirely
pooeaaet a alUciOM Huxley, Anat. Invert, p. 671. ..an.] +
'ouSdTthecent.S ectoproctotis
capsule (BdolUhia), or U partially iithlnlt (ek-to-prok'tus), a.
One of the Ectozoa; an epizoan; an ectopara-
(Endomhl?) [< NL. ecto- site. ^
Claut, Zodlogy (trans.), I. lea. priH-tus, < (ir. f/crof, outside, -I-
wpuKT6^, the
ectollttlc (ek-to-lith'ik), a. [As Ectolithia anus, posteriors.] Pertaining to or having
+
ectpzoic (ek-to-zo'lk), a. [< Ectozoa
the tamm^ to the -ic] Fer- +
-ic. J fcxtraeapsular or exoskeletal, as the skel- characters of the Ectoprocta: si>eciHeally ap- Ectozoa; epizoic; ectoparasitio.
plied to those polyzoans, as the ectozodn (ek-to-z6'on), «. [NL., < &r. Ikt6<;,
.* 'adiolarian; of or pertaining to the Gymnolamat'i, outside, -t-
^L- ,°,°f fvov, animal.]
ArWiWiw; not endolithic. which have the anus One of the Ectozoa
situated outside the cir- ;
clet of tentacles an ectozoan.
ectomere (ek'to-mer), «. [< Gr. eicrdc, outside, : opposed to cndoproctous.
+ f-eix>f, part.] In embryol., the less granular
Ectrephes (ek'tre-fez),
,1. [NL. (Pascoe, 18(36),
of thetwo blastomeres into which the mamma- „»'.'i.'"'
of J^" Po'n'S'iout
the ectvproctou,
that the characterUtlcpolypide
Polyioa is a structure developed from <hr.jKTpf^iv, bring up, breed, produce,
< m,
ban ovum divides: also appUed to a descen- ine cystld. Uuzley, Anat """"sli-] A genus of beetles, of
Invert., p. 896. ?^\ X'^i"'
the family Pttmdte, containing a few Australian
dant of this blastomere in the flist stages ectopterygoid (ek-top-ter'i-goid), a. and n. [<
of species. Also Anapcstus.
development. See blagtomere, entomereT SUectophrygoideus, q. v.] I. a. Pertaining
ertomerlc (ek-to-mer'ik), (1. \<eeUmere-¥-ic.-\ to tlie external pterygoid bone or muscle. ^i^o^w°^* .<«''-t"-V'^-^)' "• [NL- (ServiUe,
^•••,'''' o^t. + rpix^drit, like
Having the character of an ectomere
ectoparasite <ek-t6-par'a-mt), n. [< Gr. tKri^,
*¥u
of the
",•
^^} —external pterygoid bone; one /fit'/
-— lateral bones of the
.^^.^ V*
< I'P'i {rpix-), hair, -f tlSot, form.]
hair, hairy,
A genus of
palate ui
vn^j j'uiaLt, some ani- bugs, of the family Reduviidw
of Buiue
outsKlf, + Tapaanot, a parasite: see mals, as reptiles. It i.s highl
v developed for in- and subfamily
parasite.] Ectrtchodiina: jy. crucfo-
An external parasite; a parasite living upon stance, in the crocodile. See Crocodilia.—2. la is a generally distributed
the exterior of the host, as distinguish^ in typical fishes, the external of two
from bones just
behind the palatine, generally called nteruootrf. —
species in the I'nited States,
abor
lilt half an inch long, of
turning out: see ec<TOj)ic.] la. pathol.: (o) An Goth, a prefix equiv. to L. re-, again, back:
id-,
abnormal eversion or turning outward of the see re-.] A prefix now obsolete or occurring
evelids. (6) Eversion of the cer\'ical endomet- uufelt in a few words, meaning 'again, back,
rium of the womb. re-,' as in edgrow, cdgrowth, ednew. See eddish,
ectropometer (ek-tro-pom'e-t6r), n. [< Gr. U- Obveree. Reverse. eddy.
Tpo-ij, a turning off, turning aside (< iKrpeiretv, fecuofJamesV.of Scotland.— BritishMuseum. (Sizeof theoriginal.) JJd-^. [ME. Ed-, < AS. Edd-, B, COmmOU element
turn off: see ectropic), + fierpov, a measure.] in proper names, being edd, happiness, pros-
of issue 20 shillings English.— 4. In France, perity,"= OS. 6d, estate, property, wealth, pros-
An instrument used on shipboard for determiu- a sum of money, formerly consisting of three
Lnc^,nowgenerallyoffivefrancs.-5.Avege-
perity, =
OHG. 6t, estate, Icel. audhr, riches, =
^^^^^SS^'^^^^'T^^^^^^^!^^.
sockets on the deck table tracing-paper, \0 inches. Minim- X M wealth: see allodium.'] An element in proper
slsts of a verticalstanchion fitted in names of Anglo-Saxon origin, meaning origi-
or bridge and surmounted by a compass-card without a luond.
tij_„_
^
magnet The (»rd tm-ns on a vertical axis and is fitted /„i,__,jiJ5/-„j,-v „ oq^ «.
an alidade. The magnetic heading of the ship being •'^?™*?°^„*°-,^®S J^„ asEcuadonan.
adjusted on this card to a line parallel with the keel, the dor -\- -ail.^ Same .,„
S^j'
[<
'"
Ecua-
nally 'property' (in Anglo-Saxon, 'prosperity'
or 'happiness'), as Edward, Anglo-Saxon iirfd-
weard, protector of property; Edwin, Anglo-
alidade gives readily the beaiing of laud, lighthouses, etc. Ecuadorian (ek-wa-do ri-an), a. and n. l<,
Saxon Eddwine, gainer or friend of property.
AUo rktropometer. i'ciwjdoc ( Sp. i?CHador, SO called because crossed
^
teenth and fourteenth kal-i), adv. In a general or ecumenical manner, gpectively, of English "weak" verbs: suffixes of
centuries, and hung ecumenicity, (ecumenicity (ek"u-me-nis'i-ti), different origin (see etymology), but now identi-
around the neck by the «. [= P. wcumenicite = Pg. ecumenicidade ; as gg,! in form and phonetic relations, and so con-
guige, so as to cover the fecu.
ecumenic, oecumenic, + -ity.] The character of veniently treated together. Either suffix is attach-
(From Viollet-le-Duc's "Diet,
left arm and left side. da Mobilier fran^ais.") being ecumenical. ed (with suppression of final silent •«, if any) to the in-
The name of several finitive or first pel-son indicative, and varies in pronun-
2. SomeCatholics have protested against the cecmnenicity
ciation and spelling according to the preceding consonant
gold and silver coins current in France from of the synod in 1311 at Vienna, generally reckoned the
(the final consonant of the infinitive) : (I) ed, pronounced
15th oecumenical [council]. Encyc. Brit., VI. 611.
the fourteenth century onward, having a shield ed after t, d, as in heated, loaded, etc., and archaically in
as part of their type in English usually ren- 6cusson(a-kil-s6u'),re. [¥.:%ee escutcheon.] In
: other positions, as In hallowed, raised, etc., and usually
dered crown. Among these coins were the icu d'or her., an escutcheon, especially an escutcheon in some perfect participles used adjectively, as in Messed,
crooked, unnged, etc., parallel to blest, c!Ot>A:«i(proimunced
<goldeu crown), the ecu a la couronne (icu with the crown). of pretense, or inescuteheon. (2) -ed, pro-
krukt), winged (pronounced wingd), etc.
ecyphellate (e-si-fel'at), a. [< NL. "ecyphcl- nounced (with suppression of the vowel) d, after a sonant,
latus, < L. e- priv. +
NL. cypliclla, q. v.] In namely, 6, g " hard," g "soft " (-ge = dzh or zh), j (written
-ge, as preceding), s (-se = z), th(= dh), v, z, I, m, n, ng, r, as
lot., without eyphella3: applied to lichens, etc. rouged, hedged,
in robed, robbed, lagqed, raged, engaged,
eczema (ok'ze-ma), n. [NL., < Gr. cKlicfia, a cu- raised, posed, smoothed, breathed, lived, buzzed, boiled,
taneous eruption, < boil up or out, < «,
f /.fcZv, felled, beamed, dreamed, stoned, leaned, hanged, barred,
out, + ftii), boil.] An
inflammation of the 'abhorred, etc. (but after the liquids I, m, n, r, in some
words also or only -( ; see below), or after a vowel, or a
skin attended with considerable exudation of vowel before ft or w, as in hoed, rued, brayed, loued, awed,
lymph. Ordinarily the eczematons patch is red, slightly hurrahed, etc.— most words of this class being fonnerly
swollen, more or less incrusted, and moist on the removal written without the vowel, which subsetineutly came to
of the crust, and causes considerable itching and smart- be indicateil, pedantically, by an apostrophe, as in rais'd,
ing.— Eczema papillosum, the form of eczema charac- breath'd, livd, etc. (this device being still retained by
terized by papules, the swollen papillre of the skin.— some, for its apparent metrical value, in verse, but other-
Obverse. Reverse. Eczema rubrum. («> Pityriasis rubra. ((/) Acute ec- wise little used in verbs, though it is tlie rule in the analo-
fecu d'Or of Charles VI., Kinjf of France.— British Museum. zema when the color of the skin is very red.— Eczema gous instance of the possessive case of nouns, as in «ioii'«,
( Size of the original. squamosum, (a) Chronic eczema marked by the exfoli- boy's, etc.), except in a few words which have preserved
ation of large ([uantitics of epithelial scales, (b) Pityri- the simple form, namely, (8) -d, pronounced d (the vowel
the feu au eoleil (^cu with the sun), (Sen blanc (white asis rulira.— Erythematous eczema, a mild form of ec- being suppressed in both pronunciation and spelling), as
crown), and ecu d'arffent (silver crown). The specimen of zema, marked by little more than redness of the skin (ery- in laid, paid, staid, shod, heard, sold, told, and (with loss
the ecu d'or of Charles VI. (A. D. 1380-1422) here illus- thema).— Vesicular eczema, the form or stage of ecze- of the final consonant of the iiiflnitive)cirtrf, had, and made
trated weighs 61 grains. ma in which the eruption consists of vesicles containing (so spelled to preserve the
" long" vowel), aiyl, in jireterit
3. A
Scotch gold coin, also called crown, issued serum. _,
[= P. eczema-
only, amid, should, icoiiM— these forms being incgiilar
•'
in the sixteenth century by James V. and by eczematoUS (ek-zem'a-tus), a. in spelling only {laid, paid, staid), or 111 spelling and pro-
sots. It was worth at the time
Hary, Queeikof Scots, teux ; < eczema^t-) + -ous.] 1. Pertaining to or nunciation, as compared with the fonns having the usual
; :
with (, as liHikt, tackt, tipt, preM, mixt, fixt, etc. in some tered above them the sentence of warning— "Christ shall
corn-ricks. ;
come."
words, where -ed after a liquid, /. hi, n, r, or a vowel, is Rxtskin.
pronounced t instead of, as regularly, d, and in some wonls
edder^• (ed'^r> r t
.'''•'' [< edderl, n., 3.] To bind With eddying whirl the waters lock
or make tight with edder ; fasten, as the tops
•
after;;, the spelling -^prevails, either exclusively (and then Yon treeless mound forlorn,
accompanied by a change of the radical vowel), as in dealt, of hedge-stakes, by interweaving edder. Mor- The sharp-winged sea-fowls breeding rock,
felt, bought, caught, thought, wrought, Orought, sought, timer. That fronts the Spouting Horn.
taught, tlepl, twept, wept, etc., or with a parallel form in O. W. Holmes, Agnes.
pHi1pr2
""""^ loA'br^ «
^«i>,«r;) » [A dial. var. of adder^, q. v.]
-ed pronounced it, as in tpelt, tpiU, spoilt, dreamt, leant, II. trans. To cause to move in an eddy col-
pent, burnt, etc. (the t in some cases absorbing the final * An adder; a serpent. [Now only Scotch.]
.
lect as into an eddy; cause to whirl.
;
d of the inflnitive, as in beta, blent, built, girt, etc.), with Ye eddris and eddris briddis, hou sehulen ye fie fro the [Rare.]
parallel forms spelled, spilled, etc. (bended, girded, etc.). doom of belle? The circling mountains eddy in
Wyclif, Mat. xxiii.
<6) In some monosyllables the sufll.n -ed, reduced to d or From the bare wild the dissipated storm. Thomson.
-(, uabove, has blemled » itii the final d or -t of the inflni-
For eddres, spirites, monstres, thyng of drede.
Uve, forming, in earlier spelling, a double consonant, dd
To make a sniuke and stynke is goode in dede. eddy-water (ed'i-wa't6r), n. Naut., same as
or tt, which has since been simplified, as in shed, shred, Palladius, Husboudrie (E. E. T. S.X p. 34. dead-wdter.
hit, split, etc, all trace of the suffix being thus effaced, 2t. A fish like a mackerel. eddy-wind (ed'i-wind), n. The wind moving
and such
ui.li pict^rius and pasi.
preterits niiu past purkicipies
participles ueing
being assimiiatea
assimilated euuerS
edderS «
K. oee eddoes
See in an eddy near a sail, a mountain, or any other
to the; infinitive; "" original
infinitive an ' vnurul in
\nnir vowel
nfiiriiml long >, *\,cl t.iMiil* •-..
the inflnitive i w « a.
pjJi- .
/„j/:i,i _
.
eddoes.
r/ i'
beconi:ning short in the preterit and past participle, as in ^^^\ *^
iV
Edda
i!
Of or relat
,V-
"*•'
object.+ -jc]
read, preterit and past participle r«<uj
read (red), lead, preteri
preterit "'g i** the bcandiuaviian Eddas .s having the edelforsite (ed'el-for-sit), n. [< .Xdelfors (see
;
and past participle led (where the change is recogiiizeif character or style of the Eddas as, the EdtUc *l^f) + -<<e2.] in mineral., a compact calcium
:
the spelling), and hence, rarely, in the infinitive, as in silicate from ^delf ors in Sweden, probably the
Vread, preterit and past participle spread. Some'words
ending in -edi (participles used as adjectives) may with pS'Zh*%d°lhf
Cddlsn ?'?F
(ed ish), n. ^^If ^^^t'%-
[E. dial., also edtsh.
1
ead- same as woUastonite.
the definite article, or other definitive word, preceding, " "''''•'•'
ish, eddige; ->""*- etch,
contr. stubble ; corrupted eat- edelite (ed'e-lit), «. Same &sprehnite.
come to be used as nomis, having as such a possessive age, q. v.; < ME. 'edish, not found (except as edelweiss (ed'el-wis; G. pron. a'dl-vis), n.
case (in '«) and a plural (in -») as, the police took charge
:
in the comp. eddish-hen, q. v.), < AS. edisc, a L*^-; < edel, noble, precious (= E. obs. athel.
of the deceased's effects ; at this the acnued't countenance
changed. This is found chiefly in newspaper language pasture, a park for game; origin unknown, q. v.), weiss E. tchite.} The Leontopodium + =
but the plural, as "their beloveds," is not uncommon in but perhaps orig. ' aftermath,' second growth, alpinum (Gna-
recent poetry. .See -dl, -<J2, -fi, -12. < ed- (again, back) (see erf-i), -I- -isc, adj. term.; phalium Leon-
edacious (e-da'shus), <J. [= It. edace, < h. edax the formation if real is irreg. Grein refers to topodiiim) of
(edac-), given to eating, < cdere = E. eat: see ONorth. edo, ede, a contr. of emcod, a flock. It the Alps and
eat.'} Eating; given to eating; greedy; vora- isdoubtful whether eddish has any connection Pyrenees, a
cious. with AS. tjddisc, in-eddisc (only in glosses), plant much
Swallowed In the depths of edacious Time. household goods or furniture. See earsh.'} 1. sought for by
CarlyU, Jlisc., IV. 238. The pasture or grass that comes after mowing travelers in
Concord Bridge had long since yielded to the edaeimu or reaping. [Local, Eng.] Switzerland,
tooth of Time. Lourdl, Biglow Pailbrs, 2d ser., p. 37.
Keep for stock is tolerably plentiful, and the fine spring where it grows
edaciously (e-da'shua-li), adv. Greedily; vo- weatlier will soon create a iood eddish in the pastures. at a great alti-
raciously. Times (London), April 30, 185". tude in situa-
edacionsness (e-da'shus-nes), Edacity. n. 2. See the extract. tions difllcult
edacity (e-das'i-ti), n. [= It. edacitA, < L. eda- The word etch, or eddish, or edish, occurs in Tusser, and of access, it is
cita(t-)s, < edax, giving to eating: see edacious.'] means the stubble of the jirevlous crop of whatever kind. remarkable for its
Seebvhm, Eng. Vil. Community, p. 376. dense clusters of
Greediness; voracity; ravenousness rapacity. ;
flower-heads sur-
It is true that the wolf is a beast of great edacitie and
eddish-hent, [ME.
edisse-henne, and corrupt-
«.
rounded by a radi-
digestion. ly ediscine (in a gloss), < AS. edisc-hen, edesc- ating involucre of
Baeou, Nat. Hist., | 072.
If thou have any rendlble faculty, nay,
hen, -henn, a quail, lit. a pasture-hen (cf. mod. floral leaves, all
If thou hare but
edacity and lo<|uacity, come. 'prairie-hen'), < edisc, a pasture, park for densely clothed
Carlyle.
aHiii<»(DeIiuioaofOyia),£rcuM-ni<iAur(SayliigsofBragi),
Dan. trf, pursuit, intention ; Icel. idhinn Sw. third joint lan- =
adUstajMr-nuU (Art of Poetry), and Hottatal (Number idog, assiduous, diligent prob. connected with ; ceolate. The
of MetersX to which are added in iomt manuscripts Thu- AS. ed-, etc., back (equiv. to L. re-): see ed-i. Bdema albt/rimt. natural siie. larva of E. aUn-
.
"
iu JJ*.1"!**
glossary of synonyms, lUU of poett etc.
AtOte^uUdskapar-mai. or Art of Poetry, forms the chief
Cf. eddish.] A part of a fluid, as a stream of
""
/ro7w, which feeds
water which has
water, wnicli mntrnn any
rotatorv motion
nas a rotatory l^^Z.U '," » """"'"""^^ caterpillar stripeJWiVhVdlow
"f.lorsallv, •
part of the Edda (including several long poemsl the work small and,"?tblack and pinkish on the under side. ;
became a sort of handbook of poeta, and so Edda came Eddies due edematose,
gTa<tually t<) mean tb« old artificial poetry « .i ..y?'' .""J""*"- are to the vis
opposed to cosityof fluids, and to the very small degree to which thty aa cdematoui
(fidematose (e-dem'a-tos), " a. Same
the modem plain poetry contained fn faymos and sacred slip over the surfaces of solids. A portion of fluid to which
poems. About the year 1643 the Icelandic bbhop Bryn- a rotator)- motion hiw once been communicated loses this
-j_m-*_„_ (BdematOUS
eaematOUS, /^j„^„4.„__ (e-dem
/- j , ^
a-tus),
i.
a.
.-,
-
[<
Julf Sveinsson discovered a collection of the motion only by the gradual effect of - .
viscosity, so that edema(t-),tjedei)ia(t-),-\- -ous.] Relating to ede-
old mytho- e<l-
loiti.al poems, which. is erroneously ascribed some
to Siemund dies subsist for time. They are always found be- ma; swelling with a serous effusion.
Hwfussen (bom about 1055, died IISSX and hence called tween counter-currents.
aft.;r him Samundar Edda hint Fredha,
the Edda of .Sie-
Eden (e'dn), n. [= F. £den = Sp. Ed^n = Pg.
ninn.l the Learned. The poems that compose this Edda
Avoid the violence of the current, by angling In the
returns of a stream, or the eddies betwixt two streams,
Eden = G. Eden, etc., < LL. Eden (in Vulgate),
an- supposid to have l>een collected alwut
the middle of which also are the most likely places wherein to kill a < Heb. and Chal. 'cden, Eden, lit. 'pleasure'
* " t,'"rt«-"th c.ntury, but were composed
thi- ciKhtli and ninth centuries.
probably In fish In a stream, either at the top or Iwttom. or 'delight.'] 1. In the Bible, the name of the
Hence the name now giv- Cotton, in Walton's Angler, 11. 269. garden which was the first home of Adam and
en t.. Ill,' ,,l|c.ti„n, the Eldrr or Poetic Edda, In dbtlnc-
.
W Mr tJ
diT?t't^ ^^^\"^r=JL^^- "'m'
IIC
^^^J^'
Norw. jadar, )«r,
V''*'i!Lr
' "**'• ^ ^- -^ I'eage-
ing [< eddy, n.) I. intrans. To move circu-
lariy or in a winding manner, as the water of an
By the memory
Forfeit and lost.
of Edenic joys
The CTsngelization and Edenizati&ti of the world. seat of an important My mirth and edge was lost; a blunted knife
The Nov. 1885. Was of more use than I. G. Herbert.
ConffregatioTialist, 5,
theological school, and
'Tis true, there is an edge in all firm belief, and with an
Edenize (e'dn-iz), v. t. ; pret. and pp. Edenized, as the chief center from easy metaphor we may say the sword of faith.
pTpr. Edenizing. l< Eden + -ize.'\ 1. To make which Nestorianism Sir T. Browne, Eeligio Medici, i. 10.
like Eden; convert into a paradise. [Bare.] spread over a great part Back and See tacJ-i.— Basset edges. See 6a«-
edget.
— 2. To admit into Paradise confer the joys ; of Asia Edessan family Edessa bijida. se(2.— Convaneacible edge. ir,ee conmnescible.— Cas-
or branch of liturgies, that Line shows natural size- pidal edge, or edge of regression. See cuspidal.— To
of Paradise upon. [Rare.] (
class ofliturgies which is set on edge, (a) To rest or balance on the border of
For pure saints edeniz'd unfit Davies,Vi'it'e Pilgrimage. commonly called Nestorian, because used by Nestorians. cause to stand upright on an edge : as, to set a large flat
Its oldest representative is the Liturgy of the Apostles stone on edge, (b) To make eager or intense ; sharpen
edental n._ [< L. c- priv. +
(e-den'tal), a. and (Adieus and Maris). See littirgy. stimulate as, his:curiosity or expectation was set on edge.
= E^'<J0^*>_+^'-]_.I;;^«-
d<>n('-)«, 1; e-j.-.j™* (e-des'en), a.
Edessenc^ ,. [< LL. Edesseniis, < — To set the teeth on edge, to cause an uncomfortable
toothless. — 2. Of or pertaining to the Edentata.
?
^r r. j_ i_ii,„^^^°*J**f 4... feeling as of tingling or grating in the teeth, as may be
Edessa, Edessa see Edessan.'] Ssaae as Edes- done by the eating of very sour fruit, by the sound of fil-
n, n. A member of the order Edentata. san. ing, etc.
edentalons (e-deu'ta-lus), a. [Appar. < eden- Edessinae (ed-e-si'ne), «. pi. [NL., < Edessa One will melt in your Mouth, and t'other your Teeth set
tal + -ous; but prob. intended for edentuloits, + -inw.] A subfamily of heteropterous hemip- on Edge. Congreve, Way of the World, i. 5.
q. v.]Same as edentate. [Eare.] terous Insects or bugs, of the familjr Pentatomi- = Syn. 2 and 3. Verge, skirt, brim. See rim.— 6. Intensity.
Edentata (e-den-ta'ta), n. pi. [NL., neut. pi. dce, having the sternum produced into a cross, edge (ej), v.; pret. and pp. edged, ppr. edging.
of L. e(tente«««, toothless: see edentate.] 1. In and the middle line of the venter earinate, the [< ME. eggen, put an edge on, sharpen (only m
mammal., a Cuvierian order of mammals; the base of the keel being protracted into a horn. p. a. egged, < AS. ecged, p. a., only in comp. ttoi-
edentates. The term is literally incorrect, and in so A af\ ^^fij^QQi fJpQ
^ ecged, two-edged, scearp-ecged, sharp-edged),
1
a division of the order into the five suborders Loricata By such reasonings the simple were blinded and the
(armadillos), Tardigrada (sloths), Fermaiji^Mto (American 2. The extreme border or margin of anything; malicious cdyed. Sir J. Hay ward.
ant-eaters), Squaiiiala (scaly ant-eaters or pangolins), and the verge ; the brink as, the edge of a table :
Fodientia (digging ant-eaters or aardvarks). The tardi- 3. To furnish with an edge, fringe, or border:
grades, including a number of gigantic fossil forms, as the
the edge of a precipice.
as, to edge a flower-bed with box.
mylodons and megatheriums, formerly called Gravir/rada, Than draw streight thy clothe, & ley the bonjt [fold]
are herbivorous, and the living forms are all arboricole. on the vttur egge of the table. And thou shalt find him underneath a brim
Of sailing pines that edge yon nuniutain in.
The others are carnivorous and chiefly insectivorous, aud Babees Book (E. E. T. S.), p. 129.
Fletcher, Faithful Shepherdess, iv. 3.
it is among these that the entirely toothless forms occur,
You knew he walk'd o'er perils, on an edge.
Their long descending train,
as in the ant-eaters. The Cuvierian Edentata included More likely to fall in than to get o'er.
the Mtttwtremata, now long since eliminated. With rubies edged. Drydcn.
Shak., 2 Hen. IV., i. 1.
2. A
group of crustaceans. Latreille, 1826.
Specifically— (a) In jmt!/i.,a line, straight or curved, along
A voice of many tones — sent up from streams, . . .
1. Edentulous; toothless. 2. Of or pertaining — etc. In entomology it is often distinguished from the mar- barrel or a box across the sidewalk to edge ;
to the Edentata, and thus having at least no qin, which is properly an imaginary space surrounding the one's self or one's way through a crowd.
front teeth. disk of any surface, and limited by the edge. The outer
edge of the elytron of a beetle may be either the extreme Edging by degrees their chairs forwards, they were in
U, n. 1. One an ineduca-
of the Edentata; boundary of the elytron, or the lateral boundary of the a time got up' close to one another.
little Locke.
bilian placental mammal without incisors. 2. — upper surface, separated from the true boundary by a de- 5. To incite; instigate; virge on; egg. See
A toothless creature. flexed margin called the epipleura.
egg^. [Now rare.]
I tried to call to him to move, but how could a poor 3. The border or part adjacent to a line of di-
This will encourage and edge industrious and prof-
edentate like myself articulate a word? vision ; the part nearest some limit ; an initial . . .
-ed'^.] edentate.
Deprived of teeth [Rare.] ; field; the horizon's edge. Ardour or passion will edge a man forward when ai-gu-
Edentati (e-den-ta'ti), n. pi. [NL., pi. of L. For the sayde temple stondeth vpon the est egge of ments fail. Ogilvie.
edentatus, toothless : see Edentata.] group A Mounte Morrea, and the Mounte Olyuete is right est from
Sir R. Guyl/orde, Pylgrymage, p. 43.
Edglng-and-dlvlding bench. See ftejjcA.— Toedgeln,
it. ^ by by an edge manage to get in.
of edentate mammals. Vicq-d^Azyr, 1792. to put or get in or as if ;
The new general, unacquainted with his army, and on When you are sent on an errand, be sure to edge in some
edentation (e-den-ta'shon), m. [< L. as if the edge of winter, would not hastily oppose them. business of your own. Swift, Directions to Servants, iii.
*edent(ttio(n-), < edentare, pp. edentatus, render Milton.
toothless see edentate.] The state or quality Do, Sir Lucius, edge in a word or two every now and
:
It [Watling Street] ran closely along the edge of this then about my honour. Sheridan, The Rivals, v. 3.
of being edentate ; toothlessness. great forest, by the bounds of our Leicestershire.
edentulate (e-den'tfl-lat), a. [< NL. *edentu- J. R. Qreen, Conq. of Eng., p. 190. n. intrans. To move sidewise move gradu- ;
latus, < L. erfcHteto, toothless: see edentuloiis.] 4. The side of a hill; a ridge. Halliwell. ally, cautiously, or so as not to attract notice:
La entom., without teeth ; edentate said of the :
[North. Eng.] as, edge along this way.
mandibles when they have no tooth-like pro- Just at the foot of one of the long straight hills, called Wesounded, and found 20 fathoms and a bottom of
cesses on the inner side. Kirby. Edges in that country [England, on the borders of Wales], sand ; but, on edging off from the shore, we soon got out
my of sounding. Cook, Second Voyage, iii. 7.
edentulous (e-den'tii-lus), a. [< L. edentulus, we'came upon friend's house.
E. tooth: see = J. H, Shorthouse, John Inglesant, Int. chap. When one has made a bad bet, it's best to edge off.
toothless, < e- priv."+ den(t-)s Colwan, Jealous Wife, v. 3.
dent'^. Ci. edentate.] Without teeth ; toothless. 5. Sharpness; acrimony; cutting or wounding
quality. To edge away, to move away slowly or cautiously;
The jaws of birds are always edentulous and sheathed Slander, 7iaut.. to decline gradually, .is from the shore, or from the
with horn, of divers configurations, adapted to their dif- line of the course.— To edge down upon an object, to
^Vho8e edge is sharper than the sword.
ferent modes of life and kinds of food. Owen, Anat., Int.
Shak., Cymbeline, iii. 4. approach an object in a slanting direction. To edge In —
edert, n. See edder^. with, to draw near to, as a ship in chasing.
Fie, fie your wit hath too much edge.
edge-bolt (ej'bolt), n. In hookbinding^ihe closed
!
tomid bugs, typical of a subfamily Edessinw. Prescott, Kerd. and Isa., ii. 20. uncut book.
; : — ;
with an edge ; sharp ; keen. II. adv. In the direction of the edge; by of a meal generally in the plural as, bring : :
O, turn thy edged sword another way. edging. forward the edibles.
Skak., 1 Hen. VI., UL 3. .\t the last pushed in his word edibleness (ed'i-bl-nes), n. The quality of be-
Edgewite, as 'twere. ing edible.
2. Having a border or fringe of a different sub- William Morris, Earthly Paradise, III. 189.
stance, color, etc., from that of the body, as a edict (e'dikt), n. [In mod. form after the L.; <
piece of cloth or a flower.
edging (ej'ing), «. [Verbal n. of edge, r.] 1. ME. edit, < OF. edit, edict, F. edit = Sp. edicto
White cannopies and curtains made of needle work
That which is added on the border or which = Pg. edito = It. editto = D. edikt = G. edict =
Coryat, Crudities, I. 106.
forms the edge, as lace, fringe, or braid added to Dan. Sw. edikt, < L. edictum, a proclamation,
. . .
a garment for ornament; specifically, narrow ordinance, edict, neut. of edictus, pp. of edicere,
My lady's Indian kinsman rushing in,
A breaker o( the hitter news from home, lace or embroidery especially made for trim- proclaim, < e, out, forth, -1- dicere, speak: see
Found a dead man, a letter edged with death ming frills and parts of dress. diction.] 1. A decree or law promulgated by
Beside him. Tnmpton, Aylmer's Field. The garland which I wove for you to wear, a sovereign prince or ruler on his sole author-
3. In her., same as fimbriated To play with Of parsley, with a wreath of ivy bound, ity; hence, any analogous order or command.
edged tools. -Hee tool, and compare edge-tool. And border 'd with a rosy edging round.
Dryden, tr. of Theocritus, Amaryllis, 1. 52. The very reading of the public edicts should fright thee
edge-key (ej'ke), «. Same as edger, 2.
from commerce with them. B. Jonson, Poetaster, i. 1.
have known a woman branch out into a long extem-
edgeless (ej'les), a. [< edge + -less.J Not I
pore dissertation upon the edging of a petticoat. Edicts, properly speaking, cannot exist in Britain, be-
sharp blunt obtuse ; unfit to cut or pene-
; ;
Addison, Lady Orators. cause the enacting of laws is lodged in the parliament,
trate : as, an edgeless sword ; an edgeless argti- and not in the sovereign. Ogilvie.
ment.
2. A border; a skirting; specifically, inhort.,
Every one must see that the edicts issued by Henry VIII.
a row of plants set along the border of a flower- to prevent the lower classes from playingdice, cards, bowls,
Till cloKgd with blood, his sword otwys but ill
bed an edging of box.
The dictates of ita vengeful master's will
: as, Ac, were not more prompted by desire for popular wel-
Yon edging of Pines fare than were the Acts passed of late to check gambling.
Ed^elms it falls. KoMX, tr. of Lucan s Pharsalia, vi.
On the steep's lofty verge. H. Spencer, Man vs. State, p. 8.
edgelongt (ej'ldng), adv. [< edge -long, as in + Wordsworth, In the Slmplon Pass. No one of its Ithe Virginia legislature's] members was
headlong, sidelong, etc.] In the direction of the 3. In bookbinding: (a) The art of preparing able to encounter Patrick Henry in debate, and his edicts
edge; edgewise. were registered without opposition.
the uncut or folded leaves of a book by shaving Bancroft, Hist. Const, II. 364.
stuck edgelong Into the ground. B. Jonton. or trimming, adapting them to receive gold,
n. A name given by some
Specifically
marbling, or color, and burnishing. (6) The
2. In Eom. law, a decree or ordi- —
edge-mail (ej'mal),
writers to a kind of armor represented on me-
nance of a pretor. 3. In Scotch ecclesiastical
decorating of the edges of a book by marbling
—
use, a church proclamation specifically, a no-
dieval monuments, which has been assimied to or coloring. —
4. In enrp., the evening of the
tice to show cause, if any, why a pastor or elders
;
be made of links or rings sewed edgewise upon edges of nbs and rafters to make them range
should not be ordained. — Edict of Nantes, an edict
cloth or leather —
an improbable device. Com- together. signed by Henry IV. of t>ance in April, 1.598, to secure to
pare hroiijne. Also called edgewise mail. edging-iron (ej'in^-i'6m), n. In gardening, a
the I*rote8tants the free exercise of tlieir religion. It was
edge-plane (ej'plan), «. 1. A carpenters' plane revoked liy Louis XIV. in Octolier, 1085. — Edict of Theo-
sickle-shaped cutting-tool, with the edge ou the
for trimming flat, round, or hollow edges on doric, a c<Mle of laws, issued about A. 1>. 506, for the use of
convex side, used for cutting out the edges of
—
woodwork. 2. Same as edger, 2.
the Koiiian aulijects of Theodoric, king of tl»e Ostrogoths.
paths and roads and the outlines of figures,
— General edict, in Rmn. antiq., an edict made by tlie
edger (ej'frr), H. 1. A circular saw for squaring etc., in turf. pretor as a law, in his capacity of subordinate legislator.
the edges of lumber cut directly from the whole edglngly (ej'ing-li), adv. Carefully gingerly. Special edict, an edict made by the pretor for a particu-
;
lar csise, in bis capacity as judge. = Syn. Decree, Ordinance,
log; an edging-saw: usually double, hence [Rare.]
called double edger. See »oiri. —
2. In leather- The new beau awkwardly followed, but more edgingly,
etc. (see taw^); mandate, rescript, manifesto, command,
pronunciamiento.
working, a tool for trimming the edges of shoe- as I may say, setting his feet mincingly, to avoid tread- edictal (e'dik-tal), a. [= F. edietal, < LL. edie-
ing u|K>n his leatler's heels.
soles, straps, harness, eto. it ha* a knife or cutter, talis, < L. edictum, a proclamation: see edict.]
Richardson, Clarissa Harlowe, II. 220.
tlie blade of which ia varied in shape according to the
Pertaining to or of the nature of an edict or
form which it is desired to give to the work, and a gage edging-machine (ej'ing-ma-shen''), n. 1.
edicts.
A
and guides, usually adjustable, to inaure the correct pla- machine-tool for molding, edging, and profiling
cing of the work. Al»a called edge-kej/, edgt-piane, edtf*-
toti.
woodwork. Hi'O molding-machine. 2. Inmelal- principles of the —
The Praetor In framing an Edictal jurisprudence on the
Jus Gentium was gradually restoring a
edge-rail (ej'ral), «. On railroads, a rail so con- working, a machine for milling irregular shapes type from which law had only departed to deteriorate.
structed that the wheels of cars roll upon its and making templets and patterns. Sometimes Maine, Aucient I.aw, p. 56.
The simpler methods of the edic^af law were found
edge, the wheels being kept in place by flanges called a prnfiling-machine. . . .
projecting from their inner periphery so called edging-sa'W (oj'ing-sA), n. A saw for squaring archaic customs. W. E. liearn, Aryan Household, p. 421.
to lie more convenient than the rigorous formality of the
:
in distinction from the fiat rails first used. edges; an edger; specifically, a circular saw
Edictal citation, in .'icots law, a citation made upon a
edge-roll (ej'rol), n. In biiokbi tiding: (a) A mounted on a bench and used to saw boards f«»reigner wliu is not resident within .Scotland, but who ,
rolling-tool used in gilding and decorating the into strips or straight-edges. has a landed estate there, or upon a native of Scotland
edges of book-covers. (6) Ornament or decora- edging-shears (ej'ing-sherz), ». pi. Shears used wlio is out of the country.
tion so produced on the edges of a book-cover. to cut the edges of sod along walks, around edicule (ed'i-kiil), n. [= It. cdicola, < L. ixdi-
cula, a cottage, a niche or shrine, dim. of ledes,
edge-roU (ej'rol), r. <. 1. In bookbinding, to use garden-beds, etc. The blades are often set at an angle
—
an f<lgc-roU. 2. In mintittg, to roll the edges and fitted to long handles, so that the operator can work a building see edify.] small edifice a : A ;
for pari Ml? the boot -sole. Tlie Ixjot Isheld onajacli, edibilatory (ed-i-bil'a-to-ri), a. [Irre^. < LL. 1. The act or process of building; construction.
moviri'.; iiiilornatically, mid the knife trims tlie edge ami edihilis, edible, -f -atory.] Of or pertaining to [Obsolete or archaic]
takes out the feather. edibles or eating. [Rare.] The castle or fortresse of Corf u is not onely of situa- .
Kdilniatory Epicurism holds the key to all moralltv. tion the strongest I haue scene, but also of edification.
-wise.} Hame sa edgewise. Bulwer, Pelham.lvlii. Haktuyt's Voyages, II. 111.
" ;
prlitftir — &p.
,
He discourse unto us cdi/i/i«(7Zt/ and feelmgly of the r_ •'
build: see edify.~i One who or that which edi- will
substantial and comfortable doctrines
" of religion, editor (ed l-tor), M. L= y
,.. I
f
eaiteur Rn fg.
Pit • =
fies; an edifler. [Kare.] "
Killingbeck, Sermons, p. 324. -
editor =
It. editore, a, puhnaher, <. Jj. editor, one
Tending to edifica- cient Rome, a magistrate whose duty was ori for publication. Abbreviated ed city editor.
See city.
—
tion. ginally the superintendence of public build- (ed-i-to'ri-al), a. and n. [< editor +
Where these gifts of interpretation and eminent endow- mgs and lands, out of which grew a large num- g^to^al ''*t,"''t \ T%__i_;_i„'L' .l. proceeding -•'- -
ments of learning are found, there can be no reason of re- ber of functions of administration and police. ial.] I. a. Pertaining to, from, or
straining them from an exercise so beneficially edificator;/ games wi'itten by an editor as, editorial labors ; an :
Pertaining to an edi'iice or a structure ; struc- zeolitie mineral occurring near- Dumbarton, editorially (ed-i-to'ri-al-i), adv. As, by, in the
tural. Scotland. It is a hydrous sUicate of alumini- style of, or with the authority of an editor.
Mansions . . . without any striking edt/jcurf attraction. um and barium. editorship (ed'i-tor-ship), n. + -ship.]
[< editor
British Critic, III. 653.
edit (ed'it), V. t. [= p. ^diter = Sp. editor, < The office of an eilitor.
edifier (ed'i-fi-fer), n. It. One who builds; a L. editus, pp. of edcre, give out, put out, pro- editress (ed'i-tres), m. [< editor -ess.] + A
builder. Huloet. —
2. One who edifies or im- duce, publish (as literary productions), exhibit, female editor.
parts instruction, especially in morals or re- etc., < e, out, + dare, give: see date^.] If. To edituatet (e-dit'u-at), v. t. [< ML. cedituatus,
ligion. put forth ; issue ; publish. pp. of mdituare, keep or govern a temple, < L.
edituo), a keeper of a temple, <
They scorn their edifiers t' own. He [Plato] wrote and ordeyned lawes moste eqal and mdituus (> It.
Who taught them all their sprinkling lessons, iuat. He edityed unto the Grekes (the plan of] a comon cedes, cedis, atemple (see edify), + tueri, protect.]
Their tones and sanctify'd expressions. welthe stable, quyet and commendable. To defend or govern, as a house or temple.
S. Butler, Hudibras, I. ii. 624.
J. Locher, Prol. to Barnlay'a tr. of Ship of Fools (ed.
[Jamieson), I. 6. The devotion whereof could not but move the city to
edify (ed'i-fi), v.; pret. and pp. edified, ppr. edituate such a piece of divine office.
edifying. [< ME. edifien, edefien, < QF. edifier, 2. To make a recension or revision of, as a J. Gregory, Notes on Scripture, p. 49.
F. edifier = Pr. edifiear, edifiar = Sp. Pg. edificar manuscript or printed book; prepare for pub- Edmunds Act. See act.
= lt. edificare, < L. cedificare, build, erect, estab- lication or other use in a clarified, altered, cor- edoctrinatet (e-dok'tri-nat), v. t. [< L. e, out,
lish, LL. instruct, < (edes, more commonly wdis, rected, or annotated form; collate, verify, elu- +
doctrina, doctrine: see doctrine, and cf. in-
a building for habitation, esp. a temple, as the cidate, amend, etc., for general or special use. doctrinate.] To instruct.
dwelling of a god, in pi. wdea, a dwelling-house Abelard wrote many philosophical treatises which have In what kind of complement, please you, venerable sir,
(orig. a fireplace, a hearth cf Ir. aidhe, a house,; .
never been edited. Enfield. to be edoctrinatedt Shirley, Love Tricks, iii. 6.
aodh, fire, AS. ad, a funeral pyre, and see oast), There are at least lour Viharas which we know for cer- Edolianset (e-do-li-a'ne), n. pi. Same as Edo-
+ -ficare,<facere,hmld.'i I. trans. 1. To build; tainty were excavated before the Christian Era. There ,„^„^.
liid(e.
construct. [Obsolete or archaic] areprobablyforty, but they have not yet been edt(ed with-pj.ijjj-, ^ea n pt.
nl [NL., < Edolius
X.a011ia8B Ced-n-li'i-dpl
9 11 1 ae), n.
such care as to enable us to feel confident in affixing dates
And seide, " This is an hous of orisouns and of holynesse, to them. (the typical genus) -I- -idee.]
J. Fergusson, Hist. Indian Arch., p. 144.
family of dron- A
And whenne that my wil is ich wol liit ouerthrowe, gos, named from the genus Edolius : same as
And er thre dayes after edefye hit newe. 3. To supervise the preparation of for publi-
Dicruridce. Also formerly Edolianw.
Piers Plowman (C), xix. 162.
cation; control, select, or adapt the contents
Munday, the xxvij Day of Aprill, to fferare, and ther I edral (-e'dral). [< NL. -cdralis, < -edron, -he-
of, as a newspaper, magazine, encyclopedia, or
lay all nyght, itys a good Cite, and well and substan- dron, in comp. decahedron, dodecahedron, etc., <
cially Edifyed. Torlcington, Diarie of Eng. Travell, p. 6.
other collective -work.
= Gr. c6pa, a seat, base, E. settle^ : see settW^.] =
Wherein were written down edition (e-dish'on), n. [= P. Edition Sp.
In geom., the latter element of compound ad-
The names of all who had died edicion ='Pg. edigao =
It. edizione, < L. editio(n-),
jectives referring to solids or volumes having
In the convent, since it was edified. a putting forth, a publishing, edition of a lit- so many {x, y, etc., 100, 1,234, etc.) faces. Thus,
Longfellow, Golden Legend, ii.
erary work, < edere, pp. editus, put forth, pub- x-edral means 'having x faces'; 1,234-edraJ means 'hav-
To build in or upon cover with buildings. lish: see edit] 1. The act of editing.— 2. An ing 1,234 faces,' and so on.
2f . ;
edited copy or issue of a book or other work; a Edriaster (ed-ri-as'ter), n. 1 [NL. < Gr. ei5p;ov, ,
Long they thus travelled in friendly wise.
Through countreyea waste, and eke well edifyde, recension, revision, or annotated reproduction: dim. of e£pa, a ___ , -I- d'(TT^p, star.]
„ seat, , ,
genus A
Seeking adventures hard, to exercise as, Milman's edition of Gibbon's "Rome"; the of cystic encrinites or fossil crinoids, of the
Their puissaunce. Spenser, F. Q., III. i. 14.
Globe edition of Shakspere. 3. — A
concurrent order Cystoidea, typical of the family Edrias-
3. To build up
or increase the faith, moralitj', issue or publication of copies of a book or some teridw. Also Edrioaster. Billings, 1858.
etc., of; impart instruction to, particularly m similar production; the number of books, etc., edriasterid (ed-ri-as'te-rid), n. One of the
morals or religion. of the same kind published together, or with- Edriasterida. Also edrioasterid.
They that will be true ploughmen must work faithfully out change of form or of contents; a multi- Edriasterida (ed"ri-as-ter'i-da), n. p/. [NL., <
for God's sake, for the edifying of their brethren. plication or reproduction of the same work or Edriaster -ida.] +
An order of fossil crinoids,
Latimer, Sermon of the Plough. or a suborder of cystoid crinoids, represented
series of works: as, a large edition of a book,
Comfort yourselves together and edify one another. map, or newspaper; the work has reached a by Edriaster and related genera. They are exclu-
1 Thes. V. 11. the Cystoidea.
tenth edition; the folio editions of Shakspere's sively paleozoic, and in general resemble
Your help here, to edify and raise us up in a scruple.
plays.
A pyramid is present, there are no arms or stem, and the
B. Jonson, Bartholomew Fair, i. 1. ambulacra communicate by perforations with the calycine
The which I also have more at large set oute in the cavity. The shape is that of a rounded starfish or flatten-
My little
ones were kept up beyond their usual time to
seconde edition of my booke. Whitgift, Defence, p. 49. ed sea-urchin with a concave base. Also Edrioasterida.
be edified by so much good conversation. n. pi. [NL.,
Goldgmitli, Vicar, ix. As to the larger additions and alterations, ... he lias Edriasteridae (ed"ri-as-ter'i-de),
4t. To convince or persuade. promised me to print them liy themselves, so that the for- < Edriaster -ida;.] +
family of fossil cystoid A
mer edition may not be wholly lost to those who have it.
crinoids or encrinites, of the order Cystoidea,
Youshall hardly edify me that those nations might not, Locfce, Human Understanding, To the Reader.
by the law of nature, have been subdued by any nation typified by the genus Edriaster. They have no anna
that had only policy and moral virtue. Bocon, Holy War. 4. Figuratively, one of several forms or states or stalk, and resemble in form some of the starfishes. Also
in which something appears at different times spelled Edrioasterid(B.
5t. To benefit ; favor.
Edriophthalma (ed"ri-of-tharma), n.pl. [NL.,
a copy; an exemplar.
My love with words and errors still she feeds. neut. pi. of edriophthalmus : see edriophthal-
But another with her deeds. The business of onr redemption is ... to set forth na-
edifies
Shafc., T. and C, v. 3, ture in a second and fairer edition. South, Sermons. mous.] 1 The sessile-eyed crustaceans ; one of
.
; ;
It. educa
.
= ..
=
2. Fitted for or engaged in educating as, an :
in this acceptation the term is definite. It hag, however, sense, with reference to man, comprehends all that disci- One who or that which educates specifically, ;
been used in less exact and more comprehensive senses, plines and enlightens the understanding, corrects the tem- one who makes a business or a special study
ometimes including even trilobites and rotifers. per, cultivates the taste, and forms the manners and hab-
a narrower sense, it is the special course of training of education a teacher or instructor. ;
mar and high schools or in academies higher, that re- ; Cy. Why pluck you not the arrow from his side 1
Sessile-eyed, as a crustacean; specifically, per- ceived In coUegea, universities, and postgraduate study Be. We cannot, lady. . . .
taining to or having the characters of the Edri- and special or professional, that which aims to fit one for St. No mean, then, doctor, rests there to educe it?
ophthiilma. the particular vocation or profession in which he is to Chapman, Gentlerian Usher, iv. 1.
engage. With reference to animals, the word is used in
Educabilia (ed'ij-ka-bil'i-a), n. pi. [NL., pi. 2. or bring out; cause to appear or
To lead
the narrowest sense of training in useful or amusing acts
of •tdiicabilis, ed'ucable : see educable.'\ su- A or habits. be manifested ; bring into view or operation
perordinal group or series of monodelphian or By wardeship the moste parte of noble men and gentle- evoke.
placental mammals, in which the brain has a men within this Realme haue bene brought vp ignorantly The eternal art educing good from ill.
Pope, Essay on Man, IL 176.
relatively large cerebrum, overlapping much or and voide of good edueasions.
Quoted in Booke o/ Precedence (E. E. T. S., extra ser.), Yet has the wondrous virtue to educe
all of the cerebellum and olfactory lobes, and [Forewords, p. ix. From emptiness itself a real use.
a large corpus callosum extending backward to To love her was a liberal education. Cou^r, Hope, 1. 155.
or beyond the vertical plane of the hippocam- StecU, TaUer, Ko. 49. In divine things the task of man is not to create or to
pal sulcus, and having in front a well-developed Is there no danger of their neglecting or rejecting al- acquire, but to edwce. Lecky, Europ. Morals, I. 347.
rostrum. It Includes the higher set or seriei of mam- together those opinions of which they have heard so little oJucible (e-du'si-bl) a [<. educe + -ible.'\ Capa-
malian orders, as PrimaUt, Ferae, UnguUUa, Proboieidea, during the whole course of their educofion?
Sirenia, collectively distinguished from the
and CeU, tbna Hume, Dial, concerning Natural Religion, i. We ^f
iTia being orl„«o<l'
ot vJ'i;,„ eaucea.
Ineducabilia (which see). It correspond* to Qyrmeepha- But education, in the true sense, is not mere instruction ednct (e'duit), n. [= F. Sducte; < L. eductum,
la and Anheneephala of Owen, and to the wMgaMhenu and In Latin, English, French, or history. It is the unfolding neut. of eductus, pp. of educere, lead out: see
arch'iitii of Dana. The word was invented by Bonaparte. of the whole human nature. It is growing up in all things educe.] 1. That which is educed; extracted
edncabilian (ed'u-kft-bil'i-an), a. [< Educa- to our highest possibility. matter; specifically, something extracted un-
bilia + -ail.] Pertaining to or having the char- J. F. Clarice, Self-Culture, p. 36.
changed from a substance. [Rare.]
acters of the Educabilia : opposed to ineduca- 2. The rearing of animals, especially bees, silk- The volatile oils which pre-exist in cells, in the fruit and
bilian. worms, or the like culture, as of bacteria in ; other parts of plants, and oil of sweet almonds obtained
educability (ed'u-ka-bil'i-ti), n. [= F. Muca- experimenting a brood or collection of culti-
; by pressure, are educts ; while oil of bitter almonds, which
bilitt:; as educable -ity: see -6i7i7y.]+Capa- vated creatures. [Recent, from French use.] does not pre-exist in the almond, but is funned by the ac-
tion of emulsion and water on amygdalin. is a pi-oduct.
bility of being educated ; capacity for receiving If they {silkworm-moths] were free from disease, then Chambers's Encyc.
instruction. a crop was sure; if they were Infected, the education
would surely fail. Small educations, reared apart 2. Figuratively, anything educed or drawn from
But this edueability of the higher mammals and birds is . . .
afli r all quite limited. J. Fieke, EvoluUonist, p. SIS. from the ordinary magnanerie, . were recommendeil. . . another ; an inference. [Rare.]
Encyc. Brit., XXII. 59.
The latter are conditions of, the former are educts from,
edncable (ed'u-ka-bl), a. r= F. Mucdble ; < NL. office of the United States Sir W. Hamilton.
Bureau of Education, an experience.
ti. educare, educate: see educate.'\
'edueabilig,<, government, formluK a part of the Department of the In-
Capable of being educated ; susceptible of men- terior, and charged with the promotion of the cause of
3. In math., an expression derived from an-
tal development. education through the collection and diffusion of statis- other expression of which it is a part.
Man more edueabU and plastic In his constitu*
tical and other Informatlan. It originated In 1867. Its eduCtion (e-duk'shon), n. [= Sp. educcion =
is . . .
head Is called the Commissioner of Education. = Syn. pg educ^ah, < L. eductio{n-), < edvcere, pp. educ-
tton than other animals. Datcton, Orig. of World, p. 423. ^"'"""'' "*<=• <**• ir^ructiony; breedfng, ,„-;^^ j^^^ „^t gee edl/CC.]" The act of educing;
.
the mind.'] To impart knowledge and men- sec edulcorate.] I. a In med., sweetening, or
tal and moral training to; develop mentally edticationlst (ed-u-ka'shgn-ist) n. [< educa-
'-" One '^ who^' is + ~' in the theory rendering less acrid
versed
and morally by instruction; cultivate; qual- tion -ist.] '
'
1. Tending to educate, or consisting in edu- 2. In chem., to free from acids, salts, or impu-
weru. in old times, liest described as partrldgcp<jpiiing
iqulreena. Dt Morgan, Budget ol Paradoxes, p. 381. cating. rities by washing.
»
edulcorative (e-dul'ko-ra-tiv), a. [< edulcorate in -are, F. -er. Early ME. -e, -eej from the same fishemien. It is a deep-sea species, found off the New-
+ -ire.] Having the quality of sweetening or source, has usually become thoroughly Eng- foundland banks, often burrowing in the halibut, whence
purifying; eduleorant. the specific name S. parasiticxts.— Salt eeL (a) An eel or
lished as -y, or -ey ; cf. arni-y,jur-y,jell-y, chim- an eel's skin prepared for use as a whip.
euulcorator (e-dul'ko-ra-tor), n. One who or n-eyjourn-eyf etc. See -ate^^ -ade^, -y.'\ suffix A
that which edulcorates specifically, in chem., of French, or more remotely of Latin origin, iilti-
;
Up betimes, and with my salt eele went down in the
a contrivance formerly used for supplying raately the same as -ate^ and -crf2^ forming the
parler, and there got my
boy and did beat him til I was
faine to take breath two or three times.
small quantities of water to test-tubes, watch- termination of the perfect passive participle, Pepys, Diary, April 24, 1663.
glasses, etc. and indicating the object of an action, it occurs
edulioust (e-dii'li-us), a. [< L. edulia, eatables, chiefly in words derived from old Law French or formed
Hence — (6) A rope's end; a flogging. [Nautical slang.]
Trembling for fear.
food (rare sing, edulium, > It. edulio), prop. pi. according to the analogy of such words, as in pay-ee,
Lest from Brldport they get such another salt eel
of ediile (> Pg. edulo), neut. of adj. edulis, eat- draw-eCy assign-ee, employ-ee, etc., denoting the person As brave Duncan prepared for Mynheer.
who is paid, drawn on, assigned to, employed, etc., as op-
able, < edere =
E. eat.'] Edible eatable. ;
posed to the agent in -ori or -«rl (in legal use generally
Dibdin, A Salt Eel for Mynheer.
The busies of peas, beans, or such eduliou^ pulses. -ori), as pay-er or pay-or, draw-er^ assign-or, employ-er,
eel-basket (erbas'-'ket), w. basket for catch- A
Sir T. Browne, Misc., p. 13. etc.
ing eels; an eel-pot,
[NL. (Quatre- -ee^, dim. -ie, -y, and see -eel.] A diminu-
[Cf.
An
£dwardsia (ed-ward'zi-a), n.
tive termination, occurring in bootee^ goateej
eel-buck (el'buk), «. eel-pot. [Great
fages, 1842), named after Henri Milne--E(fK;arrte, Britain.]
a French naturalist.] ge- A etc. The diminutive force is less obvious in
Eel-bucks that are intended to catch the sharp-nosed or
settee, which may be regarded as a diminutive
nus of sea-anemones, made frog-mouthed eels are set against the stream, and are set
of sett-le. at night, as those two descriptions of eels feed and run
type of the family Edward-
siidce. They are not fixed or at-
eef, d- dialectal form of eatlu A only at night. Pop. Sci. Mo., XXIX. 258.
tached, but live free in the sand, Howbeit to this daie, the dregs of the old ancient Chau-
cer English are kept as well there [in Ireland] as in Fin-
eeleator, n. [E. dial.] young eel. [Local, A
or, when young, are even free-
gall, as they terme easie, ^eth, or ^efe.
Eng. (Northumberland).]
swiinming organisms. In the lat- . . .
ter state they have been described Stanihurst, Descrip. of Ireland, p. 11, in Holinshed. Eele Eeleaator! cast your tail intiv a knot, and aw ! 1
as a different ^enus, Arachnactin. throw you into the waater. Quoted in Brockett's Glossarj-.
E. beauteinpsi is an example.
eegrass (e'gras), w. Same as eddish, 1.
Edwardsiidae (ed-wiird-zi'- eek^t, t?., adv.f and conj. An obsolete form of eelfare (el'f ar), n. [< eel fare, a going. Henco +
eke, by corruption elver, q. v.] 1. In the Thames
i-de), n. pi. [NL., < Ed-
wardsia + -idm.] A group of eek^ (ek), v. i. [A dial. var. of itch or yucic: see valley, the migration of young eels up the river.
Actiniaria with eight septa. itch, yucic.'] To itch. [Prov. Eng.] A — 2. fry or brood of eels. [Prov, Eng. in
There are two pairs of directive eeket, ^- <i^^- 1 ^^^ conj. An obsolete form of eJce, both senses \
septa, the remaining four septa eel (el), n. [Early mod. E. also eele; < ME. el, eJe, eel-fly (el'fli), n. A shad-fly. C. Ballock. [St.
being impaired. All the septa are < AS. wl =
MD. (wl, D. aal Fries, iel MLG. Lawrence river.] = =
furnished with reproductive or-
gans. The tentaeles are simple,
dl, el, LG. al =
OHG. MHG. al, G. aal Icel. all eel-fork (el'fdrk), n. =
pronged instrument A
and usually more numerous than Sw. dl = =
Norw. Dan. aal, an eel ; perhaps for catching eels.
the septa. The body- wall is soft, ovig. Teut. *agla (cf. L. anguilla =
Gr. lyx^^^v^, eel-gig (el'gig), n. Same as eel-spear.
and the column longitudinally
sulcate, with eight invections.
an eel), dim, of a supposed *agi L. anguis eel-grass (el'gras), n. 1. = =
grass-like naiada- A
edwitet, f- t. [ME. edwiten,
Gr. tx'-^ —
Skt. ahi, a snake, < -/ *agh, **angh, ceous marine plant, Zostera marina. [U. S.]
choke, strangle see anguish^ anger^, etc., Echis, :
The dnll weed npholstered the decaying wharves, and
edu-yten, < AS. edwitan (=
Echidna.] 1. An elongated apodal fish of the the only Ireight that heaped them was the kelp and eel-
OHG. itawlzian, itawizon, about natural size. family Anguillidce and genus Anguilla, of which grass left by higher floods. Lowell, Fireside Travels, p. 45.
MHG. iteicizen Goth, id- = there are several species. The body is very long and 2. The wild celery, Fallisneria spiralis.
weitjan), reproach, < eel-, back, + witan, blame :
subcylindrical, covered with discrete minute elliptical
see wife, and cf. twit, < AS. mtwitan.'] To re- scales, chiefly arranged diagonally to the axis and at right eel-mother (ermuTH'''6r), n. viviparous fish, A
proach rebuke.; angles with one another, but immersed in the skin, and Znarces viviparns, of an elongated eel-like form,
partly concealed by a slippery mucous coat. The head is often confounded with the eel.
The fyrste worde that he warpewas, *'whereisthebolle?" somewhat depressed, and the lower jaw protuberant. The
His wif gan edwite hym tho how wlkkedlich he lyued. eel-oil (el'oil), «. An oil obtained from eels,
teeth are slender, conic, and crowded in small bands in
Piers Plowman (B), v. 370.
both jaws and in a longitudinal band on the vomer. The
used in lubricating, and as a liniment in rheu-
edwitet, n. [ME. edwite, edwyte, edwit, edwyt, dorsal, anal, and caudal fins are nearly uniform, and com- matism, etc.
< AS. edwit (= OHG. itawiz, itwiz, MHG. itewize, pletely united into one, the dorsal beginning near the eel-pot (el'pot), TO. 1. A kind of basket for catch-
second third of the entire length of the body. The color is ing eels, having fitted into the mouth a funnel-
itwiz =
Goth, idweit), reproach, < edwitan, re- generally brownish or blackish, except on the belly, which
proach: see edwite, v.] Keproach; blame. is whitish or silvery. The females attain a considerably shaped entrance, like that of a wire mouse-trap,
Man, hytt was full grett dyspyte larger size than the males. The sexual organs are minute composed of flexible willow rods converging
So offte to make me edwyte. except in the breeding season, and sexual intercourse takes inward to a point, so that the eels can easily
Hymm to Virgin, etc. (E. E. T. S.), p. 124. place in the sea. Young females ascend into fresh water, force their way in, but cannot escape. These
Itut the males remain in salt water, and have rarely been
baskets are usually attached to a framework of wood erect-
edyt, edit, a. [ME., also eadi, wdi, < AS. eddiff seen; and when full-grown the females return to the sea ed in a river, especially a tideway river, the large open end
(== OS. odag = OHG. otag = Icel. audhigr = for sexual intercourse and spawning. Eels are of much
of each being opposed to the current of the stream, llie
Goth, audags), rich, happy, fortunate, blessed, economic importance, and objects of special fisheries. eels are thus intercepted on their descent toward the
The common European species is Anguilla anguilla or brackish water, which takes place during the autumn.
< crfd, wealth, riches, happiness see Ed-.] 1. :
A. vulgaris; the American is A.rostrata. See Angnilla,, Eel-pots are used in various parts of the Thames in Eng-
Bich; wealthy. A nguUlidce. land. In Great Britain called eel-buck.
Vnderstondeth vn to me, edye men and arme [poor]. In that Klome men fynden Eles of 30 Fote long and 2. The homelyn ray, Baia maculata. [Local,
Old Eng. Miscellany (ed. Morris), p. 65. more. Mandeville, Travels, p. 161.
Eng.]
2. Costly; expensive. Layamon, I. 100. — 3. Is the adder better than the eel,
Because his painted skin contents the eye?
eel-pout (el'pout), n. [< ME. "elepoute (not re-
Happy; blessed.
Shak., T. of the S., iv. 3.
corded), < AS. celepute (= CD. aelpuyt, also puyt-
Edy beo thu mayde. ael, D. puitaal) (L. capito), < eel, eel, -1- pute
Old Eng. Mimellany (ed. MorrisX It is agreed by most men that the eel is a most dainty
p. 6b.
ftsh. /. Walton, Complete Angler, i. 23. (only in this comp.), pout: seepout^.] 1. The
4. Fortunate favorable. conger-eel or lamper-eel, Zoarces anguillaris, of
;
2. Any fish of the order Apodes or Symhranehii, — A
Me wore leuere . . .
of which there are many families and several
North America. See lamper-eel. 2. local
teed, eel, sleep, weed'i, etc., or erf, as in cheek, steep, leek, etc.,
or eo, as in bee, deer, deep, creep, weed^, etc., such vowels eelskin (el'skin), «. The skin of an eel. Eel-
or diphthongs becoming in later Middle English long e. Electric Eel {BUctrophoriis electricus) skins are used — (a) to cover a squid or artificial bait for
;; ::
; — ;
eel-spear (el'sper), «. A forked spear used for strike out ; tlie word is now rarely used, except of the
striking out of some record as, to expunge from the jour-
:
2. Power to produce consequences or results
eatcUiiig eels. There are many sizes and styles of the nal a resolution of censure. To efface is to make a com- force ; validity ; account : as, the obligation is
instrument. Special forms of eel-spears are known as plete removal : as, his kindness effaced all memory of past void and of no effect.
f/rick and dart, neglect. Obliterate is more emphatic than efface, meaning
An obsolete or Scotch plural of Christ is become of no effect unto you. Gal. v. 4.
een (en), ». to remove all sign or trace of.
eye. See ee. Like gypsies, lest the stolen brat be known, 3. Purport; import or general intent: as, he
e'eni (en), adv. A contraction of wen^. For- Defacing first, then claiming for his own. immediately wrote to that effect; his speech
Churchill, Apology, 236.
merly often written ene. 1.
was to the effect that, etc.
I have e'en done with you. Sir R. L'Eslrange. Whatever hath been written shall remain,
The effect of which seith thus in wordes fewe.
Nor be erased nor written o'er again.
e'en^ (en), n. [Sc] A contraction of eren^. Longfellow, Morituri Salutamus, 1. 168.
Chaucer, Pity, 1. 56.
Formerly often written e)te. They spake to her to that 2 Chron. xxxiv. 22.
effect,
The experiences dreams continually contradict the
in
•een. [Cf. -ene, -ine, -in, etc.] A termination experiences received during the day and go far towards ;
When I the scripture ones or twyes hadde redde.
And knewe therof all the hole effecte, Uawet.
of Latin origin, representing ultimately Latin cancelling the conclusions drawn from day experiences.
-enus, -inus, etc., adjective terminations, as in
H, Spencer, Prin. of Sociol., § 72. We quietly and quickly answered him, both what wee
A universal blank were, and whither bound, relating the effect of our Com-
damaskeen, tureen, canteen, sateen, velveteen, etc. Of nature's works, to me expunged and rased. mission.
See these words. Milton, P. L., iii. 49. Quoted In Capt, John Smith's True Travels, II. 42.
e'er (5r), adc contraction of ever.A These are the records, half effaced. 4. Astate or course of accomplishment or
This is as strange thing as e'er I look'd on. Which, with the hand of youth, he traced. fulfilment; effectuation; achievement; opera-
Shak., Tempest, v. 1. Longfellow, Coplas de Manrique.
tion : as, to bring a plan into effect; the medi-
[< F. -ier, < L. -drius, etc. : see -er^ and The Arabians came like a torrent, sweeping down and
-eer.
obliterating even the landmarks of former civilization.
cine soon took effect.
-i>r.] A suflix of nouns of agent, being a more Preicolt, Feni. and Isa., i. 8. Not so worthily to be brought to heroical effect by for-
English spelling of -ier, equivalent to the older tune or necessity. Sir P, Svdney.
-er2, as in prisoner, etc. (see -er-), as in engineer
effaceable (e-fa'sa-bl), a. [= F. effa^able; as
(formerly enffiner), pamphleteer, gazetteer, buc- efface
+ -able.l Capable of being effaced. 6. Actual fact; reality; not mere appearance:
[= F, effacement; preceded by in.
caneer, cannoneer, etc., and, with reference to effacement
(e-fas'ment), n.
place of residence, motintaineer, garreteer, etc. as efface
+ -tnent.'\ I'he act of effacing, or the And thiae Images, wel thou mayst espye.
state of being effaced. To the ne to hem.self mowe nought profyte.
eerie, a. See eery. For in effect they been nat worth a myte.
eerily (e'ri-li), adv. In an eery, strange, or effar6 (e-fa-ra'), o. [F., pp. of effarer, startle, Chatuxr, Second Nun's Tale (ed. Skeat), G, 511.
unearthly manner. frighten, Pr. esferar, frighten, < L. efferare, = No other in effect than what it seems.
m«3ce wild, < effertts, wild: see efferous.l In Sir J, Denham, Cooper's Hill.
It siHjke in pain and woe wildly, eerilv, uiKently.
;
her., same as salient: said of a beast, especial-
Charlotte Bronte, Jane Eyre, xxxv. 6. Mental impression general result upon the ;
ly a beast of prey. Also effear6. mind of what is apprehended by any of the fac-
eeriness (e'ri-nes), n. The character or stat«
e&tsciliatet (e-fas'i-nat), r. (. [< L. effascinatus, ulties as, the effect of a view, or of a picture.
of being eery. Also spelled eariness. :
pp. of effascinare, fascinate, < ex- (intensive) -I-
eery, eerie (e'ri), a. [Sc., also written eiry, fascinare, charm: see fascinate.'] To charm; The effect was heightened by the wild and lonely nature
ery ; origin obscure.] 1. Such as to inspire of the place. Irving,
bewitch; delude; fascinate. Heytcood.
awe or fear ; mysterious strange ; peculiar ; He carries his love of effect far beyond the limits of
effascinationt (e-fas-i-na'shon), n. [< L. effas- moderation. Macaulay, On History.
weird.
Dark, dark, grew his eerit looki.
cinatio{n-), < effascinare, pp. effascinatus, charm I was noting the good effect of the cinnamon-colored la-
And raoiDg grew the lea. see effaseiiMte.] The act of bewitching, delud- teen-sails against the dazzling white masonry.
The Ditmon Lover (Child'i Ballada, I. S03). ing, or fascinating, or the state of being be- T, B. Aldrich, Ponkapog to Pesth, p. 218.
The etrie beauty of a winter scene. Tennywon. witched or deluded. In the best age of Greek art the jeweller obtained varied
effects by his perfect mastery over the gold itself, and made
2. Affected by superstitious fear, especially St. Paul sets down the Just judgement of Ood against
comparatively little use of such precious stones as were
the receivers of Antl-christ, which is e/asetnotion, or
when lonely ; nervously timorous.
strong delusion.
then known, except in rings.
In mirkiest glen at midnight hour, C. T. Newton, Art and Archaiol., p. 395.
Shelford, Learned Discourses (Camb., I6S6), p. 317.
I'd rove, and ne'er be eerie. 7. pi. [After F. effeti, effects, chattels, effets
Burnt, My ain kind Dearie, n. effeard, a. In her., same as effari.
V. t. [< L. effectus, pp. of efflcere,
mohiliers, movable property; cf. effet, a bill,
As we lat and talked. was with an
eerie feeling that
It
effect (e-fekt' ),
bill of exchange, effets publics, stocks, funds.]
I felt the very foundations of the land thrill under feet my ecfacere, bring to pass, accomplish, complete,
at every dull ixjom of the surf on the outward barrier. do, effect, < ex, out. +j'acere, do: see/flcf, and Goods; movables; personal estate, in (ojc- (n)
//. O. Forbee, Eastern Archipelago, p. 13. Property whatever can l>e turned into money. (6) Per-
1. To produce as a result;
;
cf. affect, «'»/«<•/.]
sonal property.
eett. An obsolete preterit of eat. Chaucer. be the cause or agent of bring about ; make
;
A few words sufficed to explain everything, and in ten
ef-. An assimilated form of ex- before/. actual ; achieve : as, to effect a political revolu- minutes our effects were deposited in the guest's room of
efagst (f-fagz'), [Another form of ifaeks,
iHteri. tion, or a change of government. the Lansman's house. B. "Taiflor, Northern Travel, p. 127.
ifecks, etc. : see f/ecks.'] In faith on my word ; What he (the Almighty) decreed. The conclusion the denouement of a story.
8t. ;
certes. [Vulgar.] He effeeted ; man he made, and for him built
HagniHcent MiltM, P. U, ix. 152.
this world. Now to the effect, now to the fruyt of al.
**lifaffe! the gentleman has got a Tratyor," says Mrs. Why I have told this storye, and tellen shal.
Towwuuse ; at which they all fell a laughing. Insects constantly carry pollen from neighboring plants Chaucer, Good Women, I. 1160.
Fielding. Joseph Andrews, to the stigmas of each flower, and with some species this
is effected by the wind. Darwin, Origin of Species, p. 248. Effect Of a machine, in mech,, the useful work perform-
eff (ef), «. Same as c/Vi.
ed in some interval of time of detlnite length.— For ef-
effablet (ef'a-W), a. [= It. effahUe, < L. effabilit, Almost anything that ordinary Are can effect may lie ac.
fect, witli tlie desi^rn of creating an impression ostenta- ;
so generally u|K'n the surface: as, to dejace a building. citotu of my reputation, which Is that of your kindness. effl'scious application of actives to passives, is effectible by
The other words agree in representing a blotting out or Dryden, Account of Annus Mirabllls. them. Sir M. Hale, Orig. of Mankind, p. 388.
; ;
: !
pear to have been effective during the reign of Elizabeth. an effectresse of miracles. Sandys, Travailes, p. 7. Quhy sould they not have honest weidis [proper clothes)
Whipple, Ess. and Rev., II. 16. To thair estait doand effeir? Maitland, Poems, p. 328.
effectual (e-fek'tu-al), a. [= Sp. cfectual (ohs.)
2. Capable of producing effect; fit for action = It. cffettualejX ISlh. *effectuaUs (in adv. cf- 2. Property ; quality ; state ; condition.
or duty; adapted for a desired end: as, the fectaaliter), < L. eff'ectus (effectu~)j an effect: Than callit scho all flouris that grew on feild,
effective force of an army or of a steam-engine see effect, w.] 1. Producing an effect, or the Discryving all thair fassiouns and effeirs.
is so much effective capacity.
Dunbar, Bannatyne Poems, p. 5,
; effect desired or intended ; also, loosely, hav-
Effeir of war. warlike guise.
Is there not a manifest inconsistency in devolving upon ing adequate power or force to produce the
the federal government the care of the general defence, effeminacy (e-fem'i-na-si), n. [< effeminate : see
effect : as, the means employed were effectual.
and leaving in the state governments the effective powers -cy.] The state or quality of being effeminate;
by which it is to be provided for? Their gifts and grants are thereby made effectual both feminine delicacy or weakness want of manli- ;
A. Hamilton, Federalist, No. to bar themselves from revocation, and to assecure tlie
xxiii.
right they have given. Hooker, Eccles. Polity, v. 62. ness ; womanishness : commonly applied, in re-
3. Serving to impress or affect with admira- The effectual fervent prayer of a righteous manavaileth proach, to men exhibiting such a character.
tion producing a decided impression of beau-
; much. Jas. v. 16. He tells me, speaking of the horrid effeminacy of the
ty or a feeling of admiration at the first pres- King, that tlie King hath taken ten times more care and
2t. True ; veracious. pains in making friends between my Lady Castlemaine
entation ; impressive striking ; specifically, ;
Keprove my allegation, if you can ; and Mrs. Stewart, when they have fallen out, than ever
artistically strong or suceessf iil as, an effective : Or else conclude my words effectual. he did to save his kingdom. Pepys, Diary, III. 168.
performance an effective picture.;
Shak., 2 Hen. VI., iii. 1.
The physical organization of the Bengalee is feeble even
Nothing can be more effective than the ancient gold Effectual adjudication, calling, demand, etc. See the to effeminacy. Macaulay, Warren Hastings.
which . covers the wails of . . St. Sophia of Kieff, nouns. =Syn. 1. EJicacious, Effectual, etc. (s,eQ effective);
. . .
efficient, successful, complete, thorough. Bacchus nurtured by a girl, and with the soft, delicate
the lai^est of the ancient Kussian cathedrals. limba of a woman, was the type of a disgraceful effemi-
A. J. C, Hare, Hussia, ix. effectually (e-fek'tu-al-i), adv. 1. In an effec- nacy. Lecky, Kationalism, I. 243.
The church of Sebenico is, both inside and out, not only tual manner; witii complete effect; so as to
But foul effeminacy held me yoked
a most remarkable, but a thoroughly effective building. produce or secure the end desired ; thoroughly Her bond slave. Milton, S. A., 1. 410.
£. A. Freeman, Venice, p. 93. as, the city is effectually guarded.
effeminatet (e-fem'i-nat), pret. and pp. ef-
v.
4. Actual real. [A Gallicism.]
;
The Poet with that same hand of delight, doth draw the
;
effective men; the bombardment was not very effective; eff'ectueren G. effectuiren =
Dan. effeJctuere = manners corrupt.
effective revenue. Effective is most clearly separated from Sw. eff'€ktuera)f give effect to, < L. effectus (ef- Bacon, True Greatness of Kingdoms and Estates (ed. 1887).
the others when representing the power to do, even when
fectu-)y effect : see effect, «.] To bring to pass F, eff&mine [= =
that power is not actually in use. Efficient seems the effeminate (e-fem'i-nat), a.
most active of these words a person is very efficient when
:
accomplish; achieve; effect. Pg. cffcminado =
It. effemminatOy effeminato, <
very helpful in producing desired results an efficient cause He found him a mostinstrument to effectuate his de-
; fit
L. effeminatusy pp. see the verb.]
: 1. Having
is one that actually produces a result. Effective and effi- sire. Sir P. Sidney, Arcadia, ii.
cient may freely be applied to persons; the othera less of- the qualities of the female sex soft or delicate ;
Where such an unexpected face appears to an unmanly degree womanish applied to
ten. Efficacious is essentially only a stronger word for ; :
Of an amazed court, that gazinj( sat
efficient: as, an efficacious remedy; efficient would not be men.
appropriate with remeiiy, as implying too much of self-
With a dumb silence (seeming that it fears
The thing it went about f effectuate). The king, by his voluptuous life and mean marriage, be-
directed activity in the remedy. Effectual, with reference
Daniel, Civil Wars, vii. came effeminate and less sensible of honour. Bacon.
to a result, implies that it is decisive or complete an effec- ;
tual stop or cure finishes the business, rendering further In political history it frequently occurs that the man A woman impudent and mannish grown
work unnecessary. who accidentally has effectuated the purpose of a party Is not more loath'd than an effeminate man.
is immediately invested by them with all their favourite Shak., T. and C, iii. 3.
Precision is the most effective test of affected style as
virtues. /. D' Israeli, Curios, of Lit., III. 123.
1 have heard sometimes men of reputed ability join in
distinct from genuine style. A. Phelps, Eng. Style, p. 115.
The rarity of the visits of eMcient bees to this exotic
effectuation (e-fek-tfi-a'shon), n. [= Pg. ef- with that effeminate plaintive tone of invective against crit-
plant [PisumSativujn] is, I believe, the chief cause of the fectuai^ao = It. effet'tuazione ; as effectuate + icks. Sha/tesbury, Misc., III. I.
varieties so seldom intercrossing. -ion.'] The act of effectuating, bringing to pass, Be manly then, though mild, for, sure as fate.
Darwin, Cross and Self Fertilisation, p. 161. Thou art, my Stephen, too effeminate.
or producing a result. Crabbe, Works, V. 240.
That spirit, that first rush'd on thee The ghostly or spiritual effectuation of natural occur-
In the camp
of Dan, rences has ever been and is still the mode of interpreta- 2. Characterized by or resulting from effemi-
Be efficacious in thee now at need !
tion most readily seized upon by primitive thinking. nacy: as, a.n effeminate peSiGe ; an effeminate Mfe,
Milton, S. A., 1. 1437. Mind, IX. 368. Soldiers
To be prepared for war is one of the most effectual ways First of all, we nmst note the distinction of immanent Should not affect, methinks, strains so effeminate.
of preserving peace. action and transitive action ; the former is what we call Ford, Broken Heart, iii. 2.
Washington, Address to Congreas, Jan. 8, 1790. action simply, and implies only a single thing, the agent;
St. Womanlike; tender.
H. «. Milit, : (a) The number of men actu- the latter, which we might with advantage call effectua-
tion, implies two things, i. e., a patient distinct from tlie As well we know your tenderness of hearty
ally doing duty, or the strength of a company, And gentle, kind, effeminate remorse.
agent. J, Ward, Encyc. Brit., XX. 82.
a regiment, or an army, in the field or on parade. Shak., Rich. III., iii. 7.
effectuosef (e-fek'tu-os), a. [< L. as if *effec- = SyTl. Woinanish, etc. (see feminine), weak, unmanly.
By the last law which passed the Reichstag with such
tiiosus: see effectuous.'] BsiTne as effectuous.
difficulty the pe&ce-effective was increased Ijy about 42,000 effeminately (e-fem'i-nat-li), adv. In an effem-
men. Fortnightly Rev., N. S., XLIII. 17. effectuoust (e-fek'tu-us), a. [< OF. effectueuxy inate manner; womanishly; weakly.
(6) A soldier fit for duty. < L. as if *effectuosu-Sf < effectus {effcctu-), effect
see effect, n.] Having effect or force; forcible;
With golden pendants in his ears,
KeTerthelcss he assembled his army, 20,000 effectives. Aloft the silken reins he bears.
The Century, XXIX. 618. efficacious; effective. B. Jonson, Proud, and effeminately gay.
For the contempt of the Oospell, shall the wrath of God Fawkes, tr. of Anacreon's Odes, Ixix.
effectively (e-fek'tiv-li), adv. 1. With effect; suffer the Turke and the Pope with strong delusions and Effeminately vanquish'd by which means,
:
effeminateness (e-fem'i-nat-nes), see effervesce.] Effervescing; having the prop- efficient (e-fish'ent), a. and n.
n. The state [= P. efficient
of being effeminate unmanly softness.
; erty of effervescence of a nature to effervesce. Pr. ejlcient ="Sp. ejiciente
; Pg. It. efficiente, = =
The indulgent softness of the parent's family is apt, at effervescible (ef-er-ves'i-bl), a. [< effervesce + < L. efficicn(t-)s, ppr. of efflcere, effect, accom-
best, to give young persons a most unhappy ejfeminattness. -ible.] Capable of effervescing. plish, etc.: see effect, v.] I. a. 1. Producing
Seeker, Works, I. i. outward nature
A small quantity of effervescible matter. Kirwan. effects; of a to produce a re-
effeminationt (e-fem-i-na'shon), n. [= F. ef- effervescive (ef-er-ves'iv), a. [< effen-esce + sult ; active causative. ;
femination = =
Pg. effemiiia^ao It. effeminazione, -ivc] Producing or tending to produce effer- If one flower is fertilised with pollen which is more effi-
< Lli. effeminatio(n-), < L. effeminare, pp. effemi- vescence: as, an effervescive force. Hickok. cient than that applied to the other flowers on the same
natus, make womanish see effeminate, r.] The
:
peduncle, the latter often drop off.
[Rare.] Darwin, Cross and Self Fertilisation, p. 399.
state of being or the act of making effeminate. effet (ef'et), «. dialectal form of eft^. A
But from this mixture of sexes degenerous efemi- 2. Acting or able to act with due effect ade- ;
. . .
effete (e-fef), a. [Formerly also effoete; < L.
nation. Sir T, Browne, Vulg. Err., viii. 17. quate in performance ; bringing to bear the
effetus, improp. effoetus, that has brought forth,
effeminizef (e-fem'i-niz), V. t. [As effemin-ate exhausted by bearing, worn out, effete, < ex, requisite knowledge, skill, and industry; ca-
+ To make effeminate. pable; competent: as, an efficient workman,
-icc] out, + fetus, that has brought forth: see fetus.]
Brave knights efeminized by sloth. director, or commander.
1. Past bearing; functionless, as a result of age
Sylcegter, tr. of Du Bartas. Every healthy and efficient mind passes a large part of
or exhaustion. life in the company most easy to him. Emerson, Clubs.
effendi (e-fen'di), n. [Turk, efendi, a gentle- It Is probable that the females as well of Ijeasts as
. .
Efficient cause, a cause which brings about something
.
man, a master (of servants), a patron, protec- birds have in them tlie seeds of all the young they . . .
external to itself distinguished from material &nA/ormat
tor, a prince of the blood (efendim, my master,'
:
will afterwards bring forth, wliich, ... all spent and ex-
'
cause by being external to that which it causes, and from
in address equiv. to E. sir), < NGr. a^t it;?^ (pron. hausted, . the animal becomes barren and effete.
. .
the end or filial cause in being tliat by which something
Ray, Works of Creation, i. is made or done, and not merely that for the sake of which
ftfen'des), a lord, master, a vernacular form of
Gr. (also NGr.) aiSivrr!^ (in NGr. pron. afthen'- Hence 2. Having the energies — worn out or it is made or done. The conception of efficient cause an-
tedates that of physical force in the scientific sense; and
des), an absolute master see authentic.'] Atitle
:
exhausted; become incapable of eflcient ac-
the latter finds no place in the Aristotelian division of
of respect given to gentlemen in Turkey, equiv- tion barren of results. ;
causes. But many writers of the eighteenth and nine-
alent to Mr. or sir, following the name when All that can l)e allowed him now is to refresh his de- teenth centuries extend the meaning of efficient cause to
crepit, effete sensuality with the history of his fonner life. inclutle forces. Other and inferior writers, since the Aris-
used with one. South, Sermons. totelian philosophy has ceased to form an essential part
1 assumed the polite and pliant manners of an Indian of a liberal education, use the phrase efficient cause in imi-
physician, and the dress of a small Efendi, still, however, If they find the old governments effete, worn out, . . .
they may seek new ones. tation of older writers, but without any distinct appre-
Burke.
representing myself to be a Denish. hension of its meaning, proliably in the sense of effectual
R. F. Burton, El-JIedinah, p. 62. Islamism . . as a proselyting religion .
. has long been , .
cause. (See the citation from Lecky,l)elow.) Efficient causes
practically effete. Quarterly Jien., CUCIII. 141.
Offerationt, ». [< LL- efferatio(n-), a making are traditionally divided into various classes : 1st, into ac-
wild or savage, < L. efferare, pp. efferatm, make worn out.
= Syn. 1. Unproductive, unfruitful, unprolific. 2. Spent, — tire and emanative: thus, fire is said to be the emanative
cause of its own heat and the active cause of heat in other
wild or savage, < efferus, very wild, fierce, sav- effeteness (e-fet'nes), n. The state of being bodies; 2d, \nUi immanent and transient: an immanent
age see efferoua.]
: A
making wild. Bailey, 1727. effete exhaustion ; barrenness.
;
cause brings about some modification of itself (it is, never-
theless, regarded as external, because it does not produce
e&rent (ef'e-rent), a. and ». [= F. efferent, < What would have been the result to mankind ... if ItselO ; 3d, lnto/re« and necessary ; 4th, into cause by itself
L. effereu(t-)'s, ppr. of efferre, ecferre, bring or the hope of the world's rejuvenescence had been met and cause by accident: thus, if a man in digging a well
carry out, < ex, out, +
ferre =
E. hear^^ I. a. solely i>y that effetenete of corruption (the old Roman finds a treasure, he is the cause per se of the well being
Conveying outward or away ; deferent as, the empire]? : Buckle, Civilization, I. 221. dug, and the cause by accident of the discovery of the trea-
efferent nerves, which convey a ner>'ous impulse efficacious (ef-i-ka'shus), a. [< OF. efficacietix, sure; 5th, into absolute and adjuvant, the latter being
again divided into pi-incipal and secondary, and secondai~y
from the ganglionic center outward to the mus- equiv. to efficace, F. efficace Pr. efficaci Sp. = = into procatarctical, proeijuwenal, and instrumental (the
cles or other active tissue. In the system of blood-ves- eficas Pg. efficaz =
It. efficace, < L. efficax {effi- = procatarctical extrinsically excites the principal cause to
els Uie arteries are the efferent vessels, conveying blood cac-), efficacious, < efficere, effect, accomplish, action, the proegnmenal intenmlly disposes the principal
from the heart to all parts of the body, while the reins cause to action) ; 6th, into first and second ; 7th, into uni-
are the afferent vessels, bringing blood to the heart. In
do : see effect, v.] Producing the desired effect versal and particular ; 8th, into vroxiviate and remote.
any gland or glandular system the vessel which takes up having power adequate to the purpose intend- Medical men follow Galen in dividing the efficient causes
—
and carries off a secretion is efferent. Efferent duct. ed; effectual in operation or result. of disease into predisposing, exciting, and determining.
Same as deferent earmf (which see, under de/erent). The niode which he adopted was at once prudent and Every politician knew that the Interference of the sov-
n. n. 1. Li anat. and physiol., a vessel or effleaeioue. Barham, Ingoldsby Legends, I. 82. erei^i during the debate in the House of Lords was tlie
nerve which conveys outward. 2. river — A
He knew his Rome, what wheels we set to work cause of the change of ministry,
efficient
flowing from and bearing away the waters of Plied influential folk, pressed to the ear Lecky, Eng. In 18th Cent., xv.
a lake. Of the effieaciout purple. = S3m. Efficacious, Effectual, etc.(6eeeffective); energetic,
Browninff, Ring and Book, I. 144. operative, active, ready, helpful.
efferoost (ef 'e-ms), a. [< L. effems, very wild,
fierce, savase, < ex (intensive) ferus, wild, +
sSyn. Efficient, Effectual, etc. (see effective); active, op- U. 1.
n. Anefficient cause (see above).
erative, energetic.
fierce: 8ee.^cc.] Very wild or savage; fierce; Gwl, which moveth mere natural agents as an efficient
efficadonsly (ef-i-ka'shus-li), adv. In an effi- only, doth otherwise move intellectual creatures, and es-
ferocious: as, an efferous beast.
cacious manner; effectually. pecially his holy angels. Hooker, Eccles. Polity, i. 4.
From the teeth of that efferma beast, from the tusk of Excepting God, nothing was before it and therefore it
It [torture] does so efflcaeiouely convince :
the wild boar. Bp. King, Vitis Palatina, p. 34.
That . out of eacn hundred cases, by my count, . . could have no efficient in nature.
effervesce (ef-6r-ves'), «. i. ;
pret. and pp. ef- Never 1 knew of patients beyond four Bacon, Physical Fables, viii., Expl.
fervesced, ppr. effervescing. [< L. efferveteerc, Withstand Its taste. Browning, Ring and Book, II. 74. O, but^ say such, had not a woman been the tempter
boil up, foam up, < ex, out, +
ferveseere, begin efficaciousness (ef-i-ka'shus-nes), n. The qual- and efficient to our fall, we had not needed a redemption.
to boil, (.fenere, boil: see^errCTit.l 1. To be ity of being efficacious; efficacy. Ford, Honour Triumphant, i.
in a state of natural ebullition, like liquor when The effleaeioueneet of these means is sufficiently known Some are without efficient, as God.
Sir T. Browne, Religio Medici, i. 14.
gently boiling ; bubble and hiss, as fermenting and acknowledged. Ootdimitk, The Bee, No. 5.
qnors or any fluid when some part escapes in efficacy (ef 'i-ka-si), n, [= P. efficace Pr. effi- = 2. One who is efficient or qualified ; specifically,
a gaseous form ; work, as new wine. cacia = Sp. eficacia = Pg. It. efficacia, < L. cf- in the volunteer service of Great Britain, one
The compound spirit of nitre, put to oil of cloves, will ficacia, efficacy, < efficax, efficacious: see effica-
who has attended the requisite number of drills,
effervesce, even to a flame. Mead, Poisons. cious.] The quality of being efficacious or ef- and in respect of whom the corps receives the
2. Figuratively, to show signs of excitement fectual ; production of, or the capacity of pro- capitation grant paid by government. 3. In —
exhibit feelings which cannot be suppressed ducing, tne effect intended or desired; effec- math., a quantity multiplied by another quan-
as, to efftrvetee with joy. tiveness. tity to produce the quantity of which it is said
Have I proved . . . This hath ever made roe suspect the eMcacy of relics.
to be em efficient; afactor. — Extra efficient, a com-
That Revelation old and new admits Sir r. Brovme, ReUgio Medici, L 28. missioned oftlcer or sergeant of volunteei-s in tlie British
The natural man may efferveece in ire, aniiy who has obtained an official certificate of competency.
Itanetary motions, and aspects. Extra efficients earn an extra grant for their company.
O'erflood earth, o'erfroui lieaven with foamy rage,
In sextile, square, and trine, and opposite.
At tlw first punctnre to his self-respect? Of noxious effleacy. Milton, P. L., x. 600.
efficiently (e-fish'ent-li), adv. In an efficient
Browning, Sing and Book, II. 86. manner; effectiveV-
Even were Gray's claims to being a great poet rejected,
Effervescing draught See dri^i. God, when He Is stiled Father, must always be under-
he can hardly lie classed with the many, so great and uni-
effervescence, eSerTeMeiU7 (ef-fer-ves'ens, stood to be a true and proper cause, really and efficiently
form are the efficacy of his phrase and the music to whieh
-en-Mi;, ". [= ffferveseenee
1'. =
8p. eferveicen- be sets it. Lowell, New Princeton Rev., I. 177. giving life. Clarke, The Trinity, ii. § 13, note.
= =
aa Pg. effertescencia It. efferveseema, < L. = 8yn. Efficiency, etc. (see e/<e«wne<t); virtue, force, en. effictiont, n. [< L. effictio(n-), a representation
efferve»cen(t-)s,fVT.: see effervescent.'] 1. Nat- ergy.
(in rhet.) of corporal peculiarities, < effingere,
ural ebullition ; that commotion of a fluid whieh efficiencet (e-fish'ens), n. Same as efficiency. pp. effictus, form, fashion, represent: see effiqy.]
takes place when some part of the mass Hies efficiency (e-fish'en-si), n. [= Sp. efirienda fashioning; a representation. Bailey, 1727. = A
off in a gaseous form, producing small bubbles I'g. cfficiencia ft. efficienza, < L. efficientia, ef- =
effiercet (e-fers'), v. t. [< ef- fierce, after L. +
as, the effervescence or working of new wine, ficiency, < efficien(t-)s, efficient: see efficioit.]
efferare, make fierce, < efferus, very fierce see :
cider, or beer; the effervescence of a carbonate The quality of being efficient effectual agency efferous.] To make fierce or furious.
;
with nitric acid, in consequence of chemical competent power; the quality or power of pro- With fell woodness he effierced was,
action and decomposition producing carbon ducing desired or intended effects. And wilfully him throwing on the gras
dioxid or carbonic-acid gas. —
2. Figuratively, The manner of this divine effieienctj being far above us.
Hoi'ker, Eccles. Polity.
Did beat and bounse his head and Iirest ful sore.
Spenser, F. Q., III. xi. 27.
strong excitement manifestation of feeling.
;
The wild gas, the fixed air, is plainly broke loose but Truth is properly no more than Contemplation and her effigial (e-fij'i-al), a. [< F. effipial; as effigy
;
:
utmost efficiency is but teaching.
we ought to suspend our Judgment until the flrst effer- Milton, Eikonoklastes, xxvili.
+ -al.] Pertaining to or exhibiting an effigy.
xeeettut is a little sulisided. Burke, Rev. in France. [Rare.]
We postpone our literary work until we have more ripe- Causes which should carry in their mere statement evi.
ness and skill to write, and we one day discover that our dence of their efficiency. J. S. Mill, Logic, III. v. 0. The three volumes contain chiefly effigial cuts and monu.
literary talent was a youthful efferveecenee which we have Sneciflcally — (a). The state of being able or competent; mental figures and inscriptions.
Critical Hist, of Pamphlets.
!M>w lost. Emerton, Old Age. the state of possessing or having acquired adequate know-
= 83m. See e>/ulliliim. ledge or sknl in any art, profeHsion, or duty as, by i>ft- effigiate (e-fij'i-at), v. t. ; pret. and pp. effigi-
;
whole or in part ; an image or a representation florescence. from an ulcer. The rate of efflux of a fluid is roughly
of a person, whether of the whole figure, the Two white, sparry incrustations, with efflorescencies in calculated by Torricelli's theorem, that the velocity at the
form of shrubs, formed by the trickling of water. orifice is the same as if each particle had fallen freely
bust, or the head alone a likeness in sculpture,
;
Woodward, Fossils.
painting, or di-awing a portrait most fre-
; :
from the level of the fiuid in the vessel. But, owing to the
converging motion, the area of the orifice is greater than
quently applied to the figures on sepulchral efflorescent (ef-lo-res'ent), a. [= F. efflorescen t
monuments, and popularly to figures made up Sp. eflorecienie =
Pg. It. efflorescen te, < L. = the section of the stream, while the pressure is increased,
so that the efflux is less than the amount given by Torrl-
of stuffed clothing, etc., to represent obnoxious efflnrescen{t-)s, ppr. of efflorescere,
blossom: see celli's theorem.
persons. effloresce.] 1. Blooming; being in flower. 2. — It isno wonder, if God can torment where we see so
A choice library, over which are the efigies of most of Apt to effloresce subject to
efflorescence as, ; : tormentor, and comfort where we behold no comforter
our late men of polite literature. an efflorescent salt. 3. Covered or incrusted — he can do it by immediate emanations from himself, by
continual effluxes of those powers and virtues which he
Evelyn, Diary, Nov. 21, 1644. with efflorescence. was pleased to implant in a weaker and fainter measure
The abbey church of St. Denis possesses the largest col- Yellow efflorescent sparry incrustations on stone. in created agents. South, Works, VIII. xiv.
lection of French 13th-century monumental efigieg. Woodward, Fossils.
Eiicyc. Brit, XXI. 563. 2. That which flows out ; an emanation, effu-
efflower (e-flou'er), V. t. [An erroneous accom. sion, or effluence.
A chair of state was placed on it, and in this was seated an
efiyy of King Henry, clad in sable robes and adorned with
(as if < ef- +
flower) of F. effleurer, graze, touch, Prime cheerer, Light
^l the insignia of royalty. Prescott, Ferd. and Isa., i. 3. touch upon, strip the leaves off, < ef- for es- (< Of all material beings,first and best
a picture of (a person), eitlier as a substitute for actual a level with), < G. flur, plain, E. floor.] In = Whatever talents may be, if the man create not, the
burning or hanging (formerly practised by judicial author- leather-manuf., to remove the outer surface of pure efflux of the Deity is not his ; cinders and smoke
ities as a vicarious punishment of a condemned person there may be, but not yet flame. Emerson, Misc., p. 78.
(a skin). See the extract.
who had escaped their jurisdiction), or, as at the present BeryIlus(who was a precursor of Apollinarianism) taught
time, as an expression of dislike, hatred, or contempt: a The skins [chamois-leather] are first washed, limed, that in the Person of Christ, after His nativity as Man,
mode in which public antipathy or indignation is often fleeced, and branned. They are next ej?iou'ered that
. . . — tlierewas a certain efflux of the divine essence, so that He
manifested. is, deprived of their epidermis by a concave knife, blunt
—
upon the convex horsebeam. had no reasonable human soul.
in its middle part
This night the youths of the Citty humt the Pope in Bp. Chr. Wordsioorth, Church Hist., 1. 291.
Ure, Diet., III. 87.
efigie. Evelyn, Diary, Nov. 5, 1673.
Sp. effluxt
(e-fluks'), v. i. [< L. effluxus, pp.: see =
[< L. effiagita-
effluence (ef'l^ens), n. [= F. effluence
Pg. efflueneia, < NL. *effluentia, < L. the noun.] To flow out or away.
efflagitatet (e-flaj'i-tat), v. t.
tus, pp. of effiagitare, demand urgently, < ex
eflueneia =
flowing out: see effluent.] 1. The Five years being effluxed, he took out the tree and
(intensive) -I- flagitare, demand.] To demand effltien{t-)s,
earnestly. Coles, 1717.
act of flowing out; outflow; emanation. 2.
weighed it. Boyle, Works, I. 496.
[= F. effluxion Sp.
— =
That which issues or flows out; an efflux; an effluxion (e-fluk'shon), n.
efflate (e-flaf), v. t. pret. and pp. efflated, ppr.
; (obs.) eflujion, < L. as if *effluxio(n-) (ML. also
emanation.
effi,ating. [< L. efflattcs, pp. of efflare, blow or sometimes spelled effluctio), < effluere, pp. efflux-
breathe out, < ex, out, -1- flare E. blow^.] To =
Bright efflitence of bright essence increate.
Milton, P. L., iii. 6. us, &ow out: see efflux.] 1. The act of flowing
fill with breath or air inflate.
; [Rare.]
Our common spirits, efiafed by every vulgar breath
From this bright Effluence of his Deed out. 2. That which flows out an emanation. — ;
efflation (e-fla'shon), TO. [= OF. efflation, < L. And, as if the gloom of the earth and sky had been but The effluxions penetrate all bodies, and like the species
as if 'efflatio{n-),' <. efflare, pp. efflatus, blow or the effluence of these two mortal hearts, it vanished with of visible objects are ever ready in the medium, and lay
sorrow. Hawtho}iie, Scarlet Letter, xviii.
breathe out: aee efflate.] The act of breathing their hold on all bodies proportionate or capable of their action.
out or puffing ; a puff, as of wind. Grant that an unnamed virtue or delicate vital efiiwnce Sir T, Browne, Concerning the Loadstone.
is always ascending from the earth.
A soft efiation of celestial lire 1**6 Atlantic, LVIII. 428. effodient (e-fo'di-ent), a. [< L. effodien{t-)s,
Came, like a rushing breeze, and
shook the lyre. ppr. of effodire, ecfodire, dig out, dig up, < ex,
Pamell, Gift of Poetry. effluency (ef 'lij-en-si), n. Same as effluence.
out, -t-/o(ij><;, dig: see fossil.] In ^ooY., habitu-
effleurage (e-fl6-razh'), n. [P., grazing, touch-
effluent (ef'lo-ent), a. and n. [= F. effluent ally digging ; f ossorial ; f odient.
=
ing, < effletirer, graze, touch : see efflower.]
Sp. efluente tg. effluentc, <L. effluen(t-)s, ppr. =
Effodientia (e-fo-di-en'shi-a), n. pi. [NL.,
of effluere, flow out, < ex, out, -t- fluere, flow: see
Gentle superficial rubbing (of a patient) with neut. pi. of L. effodien{t-)s, digging: see effo-
Cf. affluent, influent, refluent, etc.]
the palm of the hand. fluent.
a. Flowing out ; emanating.
I.
dient.] division of edentate mammals, in- A
effloresce (ef-lo-res'), v. i.; pret. and pp. efflo- cluding insectivorous forms, most of which are
Dazzling the brightness not the sun so bright,
resced, ppr. effiorescing. [= 8p. eflorecer, < L. 'Twas here the pure substantial fount of light
effodient or fossorial, as the armadillos, ant-
;
efflorescere, inceptive form (later in simple form, Shot from his hand and side in golden streams. eaters, aardvarks, and pangolins : a term now
ill. efflorere), blossom, < ex (intensive) -i-florere, Came forward effluent homy-pointed beams. superseded by Fodientia, and restricted to the
blossom, flower, <flos(flor-), a flower: see flow- Pamell, Gift of Poetry. African fossorial ant-eaters, as the aardvarks.
er.] 1. To burst into bloom, as a plant. II. n. 1. That which flows out or issues forth. effoetet, a. An obsolete spelling of effete.
; :
effort (ef'ort or -*rt), ». [< P. effort, OP. ef- effrontedt (e-frun'ted), a. [Also effrontit (prop.
effuse (e-fils'), [= OF. effus Sp. efuso« = =
fort, esfort = Pr. esfort =
Sp. esfuerzo =
Pg. Sc); =: F. effronte Pr. =
esfrontat It. sfron- =
It. effuso, < L. effusus, pp. see the verb.] If. :
esforip = It. sforzo, an effort ; verbal n. of the tnto, < L. as if 'effrontatus), < LL. effron(t-)s, Poured out freely; profuse.
verb (ML. effortiare) represented by effort, v., shameless: see effront.] Characterized by or 'Tis pride, or emptiness, applies the straw.
and efforce: see effort, r., and efforce.] 1. Vol- indicating effrontery brazen-faced. ;
That tickles little minds to mirth effuse.
untary exertion a; putting forth of the will, Th" efronted whore prophetically showne Yomv], Night Thoughts, viii.
liy Holy John in his mysterious scrouls.
consciously directed toward the performance 2. In bot. : (o) Very loosely spreading, as a pani-
Stirling, Doomesday, The Second Houre.
of any action, external or internal, and usually cle, etc. (6) In lichenohgy, spread out without
prepared by a psychological act of "gathering effrontery (e- frun'tfer-i), n. [< OF. effronterie definite form or figure: opposed to effigurate.
the strength " or coordination of the powers. (J" effronteru !ffrontene), < effronte.
•
shameless, < LL. ef- —
3. In zoiil.: (a) In conch., applied to shells
A voluntary action, not requiring such preparation, is, fron{t-)s,' " ' ""barefaced, shameless: see effront.] where the aperture is not whole behind, but
both iu the terminology of psychology and In ordinary Assurance ; shamelessness sauciness impu- the lips are separated by a gap or groove. (6)
; ;
language, aaid to be performed without «/art. dence or boldness in transgressing the bounds In entom., loosely joined; composed of parts
It li more even by the efort and tension of mind re* of modesty, propriety, duty, etc. : as, the effron- which are almost separated from one another:
quired, than by the mere loss of time, that moat readers
tery of vice ; their corrupt practices were pur- oj)posed to compact or eoarctate.
are repelled from the habit of carefnl reading.
De Quineey, Style, L sued with bold effrontery. effiiuet (e-fus'), "• [_< effuse, v.] Effusion; out-
We could never listen for a quarter of an hour to the farA less touch of audacity, altogether short of efrontery, and pouring; loss; waste.
approaching to vulgarity, gave as i£were a wild
speaking of Sir James, without feeling that there was a And umch effuse of blood doth make me faint.
nna to all that ihe did. Scott, The Abbot, iv.
constant e/ort, a tug up hill. Sliak., 3 Hen. VI., ii. «.
Maeaulay, Sir James Mackintosh. m a little surprised at the easy e^onfery with «. j
I am not
in and out of Congreas,
,
take it ettUSlOll (e-tu znon; n.
f,-,/-i,„ni ,, r_
l_ y effuMon
r. ejjusxon Sd
op. —
—
litical gentlemen,
„
3. The result of exertion something
; done by SoL. ,
em to say that there are not a thousand men in efusion
.
Pg. effusdo =
It. effitsione, < L. effu- =
voluntary exertion ; speciflcally, a literary, ora- the .North who sympathize with John Brown. sio(n-), < effundere, pp. effiisus, pour out: see
Einerson, John Brown.
torical, or artistic work.
In your more serious eforU, he says, your bombast =ZYn,
dacity,
l'Hi>ertu * '
•-^"f<'n<rff): hardihood, au-
effuse.] 1. The act of pouring out, literally
or figuratively; a shedding forth; an outpour:
would Iw less intolerable if the thought* were ever suiud s,-,- li--
as, tTie effu.tion of water, of blood, of grace, of
to the expression. Shertdan, The Critic, i. 1. effirontuouslyt -\i),adv. i<*effron-
words, etc.
tiious (ct.OV cffi vutcux) (irreg.< LL. f#ron( f-)«,
3. In mech., a force upon a body due to a defi-
.
When there was but as yet one only family in the world,
nite cause. Thus, a heavy l)ody on an inclined plane
sliamele8.s, +
-ii-ous) +
-ly^.] With effrontery
no means of instruction, human or divine, could prevent
Also, the ef- impudently. effusion of Iduod. Hooker, Eccles. Polity, i. la
is said to liave an efort to fall vtrtically.
fective component of a force. — Center of SffOSl, 8e« He moat effrontuoualy affirms the slander. The most pitifull Historic of their Martyrdome, I
. . .
fort, v.). also compel, force: see effort, n His eyes effulging a peculiar Ore.
which the verb conforms, Cf. efforce.] To Thomson, Britannia. verse : as, a poetical effusion : commonly used
in disparagement.
strengthen; reinforce. n. inlrans. To send forth a flood of light; Two or three of his shorter effusions, indeed, . . . have
Ills spirits with the remembrance and rela-
He efforted shine with splendor. a npirit that would make them amusing anywhere.
ofwhat formerly he had been and what he bad done. efltllgence (e-fii!'jens), «.
tion [= Sp. efulgencia, < Tieknor, Span. Lit., I. 345.
Fuller, Worthies, Cheshire.
L. effulgen{t-)s, ppr. see effulgent.] shining : A 4. In pathol., the escape of a fluid from the
effortless (ef'6rt-les or -*rt-les), a. [< effort forth, as of light; great luster or brightness;
vessels containing it into a cavity, into the sur-
+ -lf;i8.] Making no effort. splendor as, the effulgence of divine glory.
:
rounding tissues, or on a free surface as, the :
Were
But idly to remain
yielding effortless, and waiting death.
So breaks on the traveller, faint and astray,
The bright and the balmy effutnence of morn.
effusion of lymph. —5. [ML. eff'usio{n-), tr. of Gr.
Southdty, Thalaba, iv. Beattte, The Hermit. piiaic.] That part of the constellation Aquari-
To glow with the effulgence of Christian truth. us (which see) included within the stream of
effossicn (e-fosh'on), n. [< LL. effosgio(n-), a
Sumner, Hon. John Pickering. water. It contains the star Fomalhaut, now lo-
(liKs^iiH out, < L. "effodire, pp. effomus, dig out:
Hou effodient."^ The act of digging out of the -Syn. BrilUnnee, Luster, etc. &ee radiance. cated in the Southern Fish —
Effusion of gases. In
rhem., the escape of ga.ses through minute apertures into a
earth; exfodiation. [Bare.] effulgent (e-ful'jent), a. [< L. effulgen(t-)s.
vacuum. In his cxperinientJ! to determine the lute of elfu-
ppr. of effulgere', shine forth: see effulge.] alon of liases, (Jrahaiii iwcd thin ahcet« of metal or glass, per-
He ... set apart annual niiiui tor the recovery of
shining; bright; splendid; diffusing a flood forated with minute apertures .086 millimeter or .003 inch
manuscripts, the effossions of coins, and the ravcuring of
mnmroiea. Mmiimu Seribltrus, I. of light. in diameter The rates of effusion coincided so nearly
The downward sun with the rates of diffusion as to lead to the conclusion that
efl^acture (e-frak'tur), n. [< LL. effractura, a lx>ok8 out effuiijent from amid the flash iHith phenomena follow the same law, and therefore the
lirciikiin; (only in ref. to housebr<'aking), < ef- Of broken clouds. Thomson, .Spring. rates of clfnsion are Inversely as the s<iuare roots of the
lensities of the gases.
fnng<:rc, pp. cffractwi. break, break open, < rx. effulgeutly (e-ful'jent-li), adr. In an effulgent
+ gS^l^e-fii'sivj, a [< L. as if 'effusivus, <
out, frangere, break: nee fraction, fracture.] [ili'iiilid manner,
effundere, pp. effiisus, pour out: see effuse.] 1.
In nurg., a fracture of the cranium with depres- effumabilityt (e-fu-ma-biri-ti), n. [< effuma- ("ouringout; flowing forth prof usely as, e^M- :
!<ion of the broken bone. hlr: see -hilily.] Tfie quality of flying off in
sioe speech.
effranchise (e-fran'ehiz), r. (.; pret. and pp. fumes of vapor, or of being volatile. Th* effusive south
cffranrliLied. ppr. effranchixtng. [< OF. effran- Paracelsus . seems to deflne mercury by volatility,
. . Warms the wide air. and o'er the void of heaven
(tims-, rsfranrhiKS-. stem of certain parts of ef- or (If I nuiy coin such a word) effumabilUy. Breathes the big clouds with vernal showers distent.
L. ex, Boyh, Works, I. 639. Thomson, Spring, I. 144.
francker, esfrancher. affranchise, < es- (<
! ;
tearful. Lowell, Among ray Books, 2d ser., p. 121. Egalit^), as a token of his adherence to the revolution
creative product of the female, corresponding
3. Poured abroad ; spread or poured freely. he was nevertheless guillotined by the revolutionists in to the sperm, sperm-cell, or spermatozoon of
With thirsty sponge they rub the tables o'er 1793. the male. In biology the term is used in the widest
(The swains unite the toil) the walls, the floor,
; egality (e-gal'i-ti), w.;
pi. egalities (-tiz). [< ME. possible sense, synonymously with ovum (which see). In
its simplest expression, an egg is a mass or speck of proto-
Wash'd with th' effusive wave, are purg'd of gore. egalite, egaUtee, < OF. egalite, egaute, F. igalit6,
Pope, Odyssey, xxii. plasm capable of producing an organism like the parent,
< 1,. (equalita(t-)s, equality: see equality, the sometimes by itself, oftener only by inipregnatioti with
eflfosively (e-fu'siv-li), adv. In an effvisive present E. form.] Equality. [A rare Galli- the corresponding substance of the opposite sex and in ;
the " white "of an egg. Both the white and the
'
yel-
eafiest or efiest). The alleged eft, convenient, handy, egerian, a.
' See mgerian. '
egest not. Bacon, Nat. Hist., § 899. body of the embryo after segmentation of the whole vitel-
Ye may eftsones hem telle, lus, are called holoblastic ; others, with a quantity of food-
We usen here no womraen for to selle. egesta (e-jes'ta), «. pi. [NL., neut. pi. of L. meroblas-
yolk which does not undergo segmentation, are
ChaxLcer, Troilus, iv. 181. egestus, pp. ot egerere, void, vomit: see egest.] tic. All large eggs, as birds', are meroblastic. In these the
Sir, your ignorance That which is thrown out ; specifically, excre- egg proper is known as the cicatricula or tread; and the
Shall efUoon be confuted. mentitious matters voided as the refuse of di- tough, stringy albimien which steadies or buoys the yellow
Chapman, All Fools, ii. 1. in the white forms the chalazai. The gei-m-yolk and the
gestion; excrement, feces, or dejecta of any food-yolk may occupy different relative positions. (See cen-
Hold off, unhand me, greybeard loon
Eftsoons his hand dropt he. kind: opposed to ingesta. trolecithal, ectolecithal, etc.) The organ in which an egg is
Coleridffe, Ancient Mariner, i.
During this time she vomited everything, the egesta produced, whatever its size, shape, or position in the body
Med. News, XLI. 340. of the female, is the ovary ; the passage by which it is con-
e. g. An
abbreviation of the Latin exempli gra- being mixed with bile.
veyed to another part of the body, or to the exterior, is an
tia: for the sake of an example; for example. egestion (e-jes'chon), n. [< L. egestio(n-), < oviduct. In the former all the essential parts of the egg
Ega (e'ga), n. [NL. (Castelnau, 1835) ; a geo- egerere, py'.egestus,'voi(i,\oiiiit: see egest] The appear; in the latter various accessory structures, as the
graphical name.] A act of voiding the refuse of digestioUj or that
white and the shell, are deposited. All sexed animals
"lay" eggs; those in which the egg passes directly out of
genus of adephagous which is voided; defecation; dejection: op- the body, to be hatched outside, are called oviparous;
ground-beetles, of the posed to ingestion. those in which the egg severs its vascular or vital connec-
family Carabidw, con- tion with the parent, but remains inside the body to hatch,
It is confounded with the intestinal excretions and are ovoviviparous ; those whose eggs retain vascular con-
taining about 12 spe- egestions. Sir T. Browne, Vulg. Err., iii. 13.
nection with the parent, as by means ot a placenta and an
cies, nearly all from
tropical countries, but
egestive (f-jes'tiv), a. [< egest -ive.] Of or + umbilical cord, so that they bring forth alive, are vivipa-
rous. In the last the oviducts are more or less modified, as
for egestion: opposed. to ingestive.
two of them North into Fallopian tubes, uterus, and vagina, for the purpose
eggi (eg), n. [< ME. egge, pi. egges, eggis (of of gestation, as distinguished from the incubation of eggs
American, E. sallei Seand. origin, < leel. egg, etc., below), parallel laid outside the body. Egg-laying, as of birds, reptiles,
and E. Iwtula. Also with ME. ey, eye, ay, ai, pi. eyren, eiren, ayreu, insects, etc., is called oviposition; many insects have the
called Clialybe, Selina, end of the abdomen modified into a special ovipositor. The
eren, etc. (this form, which disappeared in the
and Steleodera. normal and usual shape of an egg is the sphere, preserved
first half 01 the 16th century, would have given even in some large eggs, as those of turtles many eggs ;
[A minced form of origin : namely, < AS. ccg, rarely ceig (in comp. a hard chalky shell, as birds', present a characteristic fig-
the oath by God. Cf. ure, the ovoid, varying to more or less conical, or ellipti-
ecod, gad?, etc.] An
also aiger-), pi. a:gru, = D. ei = MLG. ei, eig,
cal, or subspherical. In such cases the large end is called
exclamation express-
LG. ei = OHG. ei, pi. eigir, MHG. ei, G. ei, pi. the butt, the small end the point. All mammalian eggs,
with its contents, segmented at the surface of the earth, are contained when laid. <&) The silken case in which ornith., the egg-pod.
and supixised to be an egg in process of incubation. IBgg [ME. eggement;
Satorda^, or Feast of Eggs (Festum Uvorum), the day
many spiders inclose their eggs an egg-pouch, (c) The
; eggmentt (eg'ment), n. < egg^
case in which the eggs of sharks and other elasmobranchs -f- -ment.1 Inciliement instigation.
before Quinquagesima Sunday. ;
are contained a sea-barrow, (d) The ovicapsule of vari-
;
By the common people too, the preceding Saturday ous marine carnivorous gastropods, especially of the fam- Thurgh womannes eqgetnent
(that precedini; " the Sunday before the first in Lent"], in ilies Ilurcinidt^, Muricidce, etc. See ovieapettU. Mankind was lorn, and damned ay to die.
Oxfordshire particularly. Is called Egn Saturday.
egg-cell (eg'sel), n. An ovum ; an ovule ; an Chaucer, Man of Law's Tale, 1. 744.
llamimn, iledii .£vi Kalendarium, 1. 158.
blue, drab, oclirey, etc. or par- Pride, Egotivm, etc. See egotism.
various tones, as green, ;
To hear the lark begin his flight, . . .
ty-colore»l in many shades of reds, browns, etc., In endless And at my window bid good morrow egoist (e'go-ist), n. [= D. G. Dan. 8w. egoist
Tariety of patterns. Bi-sides the evident diversity of char- Through the sweet-briar or the vine = P. egoiste = Sp. Pg. It. egoista; as ego + -ist.']
acter in thickness, roughness, etc., the shell has many the twisted eqlanti'ne.
t>r 1. One who is characterized by egoism; a sel-
variations in microsiwpic texture, depending upon
of the deposition of the particles of lime in the pod. The
details Milton, L' Allegro, 1. 48.
Eglantitie has sometimes been erroneously taken for the
fish or self-centered person. 2. In metaph., —
shell of an ostrich's egg is so thick and hard that it may se- ^"''. h9Wing t\e<loctrine_ of egoism.
honeysuckle, and it seems more than probable that Milton
riouslv wound a man if the egg explodes, as it sometimes so understood it, by his calling it " twisted." If not, he CgOlStlC, egOlStlCal (e-go-is tlk, -tl-kal), o. [<
does when addled, in consequence of the compression of nnist have meant the wildrose. Nares. egoint + -ic, -ical.} 1. Characterized by the vice
the g:ise.'< generated in decomposition.— Egg-sheU cUna,
egg-shell porceljlln, porcelain of extreme thinness and eglenteret, « [ME., also eglentier (the form of egoism absorbed in self.
; 2. In ethics, per- —
translncenev. It was made originally in China, and is cglctere in Tennyson being a spurious mod. taining or relating to one's self, and not to
now produced also in European factories, where the pro- archaism); =
MD. eghelentier,< OF. eglentier, others ; relating to the promotion of one's own
cess consists in Hlling a mold of plaster of Paris with the well-being, or the gratification of one's own
material called barbotine, of which a thin film at once ad- eglenter, aiglantier, aglantier, esglantier (ef. Pr.
heres to the mold from the absorption of its moisture by uiguiUineier), the eglantine, prop, the bush or desires characterized by egoism
; opposed to :
the gypsum. The liquid barbotine being U\en thrown out tree as distinguished from the flower; with altruistic.
and the mold put into the kiln, the film remaining in it is suffix -ier (E. -er"^, L. -arius), < aiglant, aiglent, The adequately egoittic individual retains those powere
baked, and can then be removed from the mold. which make altruistic activities possible.
(eg'slis), n. A kitchen utensil for re- aglant, the eglantine: see eglantine.'] The //. Spencer, Data of Ethics, f 72.
egg-slice
moving omelets or fried eggs from a pan. sweetbrier; eglantine.
3. In metaph., involving the doctrine that no-
egg-spoon (eg'spon), »i. A small spoon for eat- He was lad into a gardin of Cayphas, and there he was
Mandeville, Travels, p. 14.- thing exists but the ego.
cround with eglentier.
ing eggs from the shell.
The woodbine and egtetere The egoistical idealism of Fichte is less exposed to criti-
egg-syringe (eg sir ' inj), w. A small, light
'
Drip sweeter dews than traitor's tear. cism than the theological idealism of Berkeley.
metal syringe for forcing a stream of water Tennyson, A Dirge. Sir W. Hamilton.
into an egg to empty it, or to wash the inside «
An obsolete spelling of efffan- Egoistical object, a mode of consciousness regarded as
eglentinet,
of the shell, for oological purposes. The best are "g„g_ J/iJiWiCw an (jbjict. -Egoistical representationlsm, the doc-
trine tliat the external world is known to us by means of
enough „_i „_„+„, (e-glom
made with a ringin the end of the piston large to ,= „i„™'a- st'i «
fer-at), » t. pret. and pp.
insert the thuml), so that they can be worked with one eglomeratet ^
; representative ideas, and tliat these are modifications of
[< L. e, out, 4-
'
hand while the other holds the egg. The nozle is tine, eglomerated, ppr. eglomerating. consciousness.
and may be variously curved. glomeratiis, pp. of glmnerare, -wind up into a egoistically (e-go-is'ti-kal-i), adv. In an egois-
egg-tester (eg'tes't^r), «. A
device for exam- ball: see glomerate.'] To unwind, as a thread tic manner as regards one's self.
;
ining eggs by transmitted light to test their age from a ball. Coles, 1717. Each profits egoistically from the growth of an altru-
and conditio'n or the advancement of an embry- egma (eg'ma), m. A
humorous corruption of ism which leads each to aid in preventing or diminishing
H. Spencer, Data of Ethics, § 77.
onic chick. It may be in the form of a dark lantern with en igma. others' violence.
an opening through which the egg is viewed, or of a box with
perforated lid carrying the eggs, and a reflector below for
Arm. Some enigma, some riddle come, thy I'envoy : egoity (e-go'i-ti), n. [< ego + -ity.] The es-
begin. sential element of the ego or self egohood.
throwing the light through them, or in the much simpler
;
pret.
, ,
and pp.
..
egoizea, ppr.
these, the terms object and objective are now in use to egOlZe (e go-iz), V. i. ;
may be facilitated. denote the non-ego, its affections and properties, and, in cgoizing. [< ego +excessive -ize.] To give
The embryos [of serpents] are provided with an egg- general, the really existent as opposed to the ideally attention or consideration to one's self, or to
tooth, a special development like that of the chick. known. Sir W. Hamilton.
Statid. Nat. Hist., III. 352.
what relates to one's self ; be absorbed in self.
For the ego without the non-ego is impossible in fact and
thought, and the abstraction of the ego [Rare.]
meaningless in
egg-trot (eg'trot), n. In the manege, a cautious from the bodily organisation and the intuition of itself liy egophonic, egophony. See wgophonic, legoph-
jog-trot pace, like that of a housewife riding to itself as a non-bodily entity is an artificial and deceptive ony.
market with eggs in her panniers. Also called proce.ss. Maudsley, Body and Will, p. f)6.
egdtheism (e'go-the-izm), «. [< Gr. fju, E. =
cggwife-trot. Absolute ego. See absolute.— The empirical ego, the
wliat " I " am conscious of as
I, -t- 0e6Q, God, +
E. -ism.] The deification of
egg-tube (eg'tub), n. In zool., a tubular organ self as the object of itself ;
" myself."— The pure ego, the self regarded abstractly self; the substitution of self for the Deity;
in which ova are developed, or through which apart from every object of also, the opinion that the individual self is es-
as the mere thinking subject,
they are conveyed to or toward the exterior of thought, even itself. sentially divine.
the body an oviduct.
;
ego-altruistic (e'go-al-tro-is'tik), a. Relating egotism (e'go-tizm or eg'9-tizm), «. [< ego
The ovaries (in Lejndoptera] consist on either side of four or pertaining to one's seli and to others See ^(see egotist) -ism.] +
1. The practice of put-
very long many-chambered egg-tut>es, which contain a great the extract. ting forward or dwelling upon one's self ; the
quantity of eggs. Claus, Zoology (trans.), p. 581.
From the egotistic sentiments we pass now to the ego- habit of talking or writing too much about one's
egg-nrchin (eg'6r''chin), n. A globular sea-ur- altruistic sentiments. By this name I mean sentiments self.
which, while implying self-gratification, also imply grati-
chin one of the echini proper, or regular sea-
; Adieu to etjotism ; I am sick to death at £he very name
fication in others ; the representation of this gratification "
urchins, as distinguished from the flat ones in others being a source of pleasure not intrinsically, but of self, Shelley, in Dowden, I. 101.
known as cake-urchins, or the cordate ones because of ulterior benefits to self which experience asso- It is idle to criticise the egotism of autobiographies,
ciates with it. //. Spencer, Prin. of Psychol., § 619. however pervading and intense.
called heart-urchins.
fe (eg'wif), «. A
woman who sells eggs, egohood
(e'go-hud), w. [< ego >r -hood.] In- W. li. Greg, Misc. Essays, 1st ser. , p. 177.
— EggWlfe-trot. Same as e<7(7 «ro( 3ividuality ;~ personality. Brit. Quarterly Bev. Hence — 2. An excessive esteem or considera-
eghet, ". An obsolete variant of eye. Chaucer
egoical (f-go'i-kal), a. [< ego -ic-al.] Per- + tion for one's self, leading one to judge of
egidos, n. pi. [Sp.] See ejido. taining to egoism. Hare. [Rare.] everything by its relation to one's own inter-
egilopic, egilopical, etc. See wgilopic, etc.
egoism (e'go-izm), n. [= D. G. egoismus Dan. = ests or importance.
egis, " See a-gis. cgoisme =
Sw. egoism P. ego'isme = Sp. Pg. It. = The most violent egotism which I have met with ... is
eglandular (e-glan'dij-lar), a. [< L. e- priv. -I- e'goismo; as ego -ism.] +
1. The habit of valu- that of Cardinal Wolsey, "Ego et rex mens, I and my
King." Sjm-tator, No. 562.
glandula, gland see glandular.] In biol., hav- ing everything only in reference to one's per-
:
ing no glands. There can be no doubt that this remarkable man owed
sonal interest; pure selfishness or exclusive the vast influence which he exercised over his contempo-
eglandulose, eglandulous (e-glan'du-16s, -lus), reference to self as an element of character. raries at least as much to bis gloomy egotism as to the
a. [< L. e- priv. -I- glandula, gland: see glan- Tlie Ideal, the True and Noble that was in them having real power of his poetry. Macaulay, Moore's Byron.
dulose.] Same as eglandular. faded out, and nothing now remaiinng but naked egoism, Selfishness is only active egotinm.
eglantine (eg'lan-tin or -tin), n. [Early mod. vulturous greediness, they cannot live. Carlylr. Lowell, Among my Books, 1st ser.. p. 364.
E also eglentine; first in the 16th century, < F. 2. In ethics, the doing or seeking of that which =Syn. Pride, Egotiam, Vanity, Conceit, Self-ctmceit, Set/-
eglantine, 'aiglantine, now eglantine (= Pr. aig- affords pleasure or advantage to one's self, in consci(»i»ness. Pride and egotism imply a certain indif-
I'entina), eglantine (cf. OF. aiglantin, adj., per- ference to the opinions of others concerning one's self.
distinction to that which affords pleasure or Pride is a self-contained satisfaction with the excellence
taining to the eglantine); with suffix -ine (E. advantage to others: opposed to altruism. In of what one is or has, despising what others are or think.
-tiu;, L. -inns, fem. -ina), < OP. aiglant, aiglent, this sense the term does not necessarily imply Vanity is just the opposite it is the love of being even;
aglent =. Pr. aguilen, sweetbrier, hip-tree, < anything reprehensible, and is not synonymous fulsomely admired. Pride rests often upon higher or in-
trinsic things as, pride of fannly, place, or power intel-
L. 'aeulentus, an assumed form, lit. prickly, with egotism. : ;
Doth bud and spring with a merry cheere. having its particular gratification and the further we go
; elevation of the real self to rest upon w eal th, dress, or other
The A'odte fisherman (Child's Ballads, V. 329). back in civilisation, the greater is the predominance which external things. Egotism is a strong and olftrnsive con-
Sweet is the eglantine, but pricketh nere. these egoistic impulses have. fidence in one's self! shown primarily in conversation, not
Spenser, .Sonnets, xxvi. Maudsley, Body and Will, p, 164, only by frequent references to self, but by monopolizing
! : ! ;
We never could very clearly understand how it is that act of going or issuing out a going or passing cherry, which we also call Jgrno*-cherry " (Cot-
;
by egotism, in either sense of that 'word. apheresis Gipcien, (xipsen, etc., whence mod.
egression (e-gresh'on), n. [= Sp. (obs.) egrc-
We are all egotitts in sickness and debility. .'ion, < L. e'gressio(n-), < egressus, pp. of egredi,
Gipsy, q. v.); < OP. Egyptien, F. Egyptian =
0. W. Holme; Old VoL of Life, p. 2s.
The act of going out, Sp. Egipciano, < L. jEgyptius, < Gr. AiyvTznof,
go out: see egress.]
Egj'ptian, < Alytmroc (L. ^gyptus), m., Egypt,
egotistic, egotistical (e-go- or eg-^tis'tik, e-go- especially from an inclosed or confined place
or eg-o-tis ti-kal), a. Pertaining to or of the departure ; outward passage ; egress. [Bare.] fem., the Nile. The name does not appear to
nature of egotism characterized by egotism be of Egyptian or Semitic origin.] it a. 1.
; Inig. So thou mayst have a triumphal egression.
as, an egotistic remark an egotistic person. ; Pug. In a cart, to be hanged Pertaining to Egypt, a covmtry in the north-
B. Jonson, Devil is an Ass, v. 4. ea.stern part of Africa, in the valley and delta
It would, indeed, be scarcely safe to draw any decided
inferences as to the character of a writer from paaaases The wise and good men of the world, . especially in . .
of the Nile.— 2t. Gipsy. See II., 2.-Egyptlan
directly e<joti9tical, Maeaukty. the days and periods of their Joy and festival egressions, architecture, the architecture of ancient Egypt, which,
chose U} thrww some ashes into their chalices. among its peculiar monuments, exhibits pyramids, rock-
-Syn. Conceited, rain, self-important, opinionated, as-
Jer. Taylor, Holy Dying, ii. 1. cut temples and tontbs, and gigantic monolithic obelisks.
suming. See epotitm.
The characteristic features of the style are solidity and
egotistically (e-go- or eg-o-tis'ti-kal-i), adv. In egressor (e-gres'or), «. One who goes out. the majesty attending colossal size. .-Vmong its peculiar-
"
an e^rotistieal manner. egret (e'gr'et), n. [Also, in some senses, aigret, ities are: (a) The gradual converging or sloping inward
of most of its exterior wall-surfaces. This is especially
egotize (e'go-tiz or eg'o-tiz), r. «. ; pret. and aigrette, tonnerXy egrett, egrette, (egret; < P. ai-
noticeable in the pylons or monumental gateways stand-
pp. egoti:ed, ppr. egoti^ritig. [< ego t (see ego-+ grette, a sort of heron, a tuft of feathers, a tuft,
ing singly or in series before its temples. (&) Roofs and
tist) + -ize.] To talk or write much of one's a cluster (of diamonds, etc.), the down of seeds,
self ; exhibit egotism. [Bare.] etc., dim. of OF. 'aigrc, 'aigron, mod. F. dial.
I e^tize in my letters to thee, not liecanse I am of much igron, foimd in OF.only with loss of the guttural,
importance to myself, but liecauae to thee both ego and hiron, mod. F. hiron, a heron, whence E. tteron :
all that ego does are uiterestliig.
Cooper, To Lady Besketh.
see heron.] 1. A
name common to those spe-
cies of herons which have long, loose-webbed
In these hnmble eaaaykins I have taken leave to tftotiie.
Thaekeray, A Hundred Years Hence.
plumes, forming tufts on the head and neck,
or a flowing train from the back.
egrannlose (e-gran'u-los), a. [< L. e- priv. -1-
In the famous feast of Archbishop Nevill, we And no less
(jrrunutose.] In hot.', not granulosa; without than a thousand asterides, egrets or egrittes, as it is differ-
granulations. ently spelt. Pennant, Brit. Zoology.
egret (e'gr), n. Same as eager^. 2. A heron's plume.
egreet, prep. phr. as adv. A Middle English Their head tyres of flowers, mix'd with silver, and gold,
form or agree. with some sprigs of agrets among.
Tfaene the empenmr was 4gree, and enkerly fraynes B. Jtmson, Masques, Chloridia.
The answere of Artbure.
JTorts ArtXwri (E. B. T. 8.), I. S07.
3. A topknot, plume, or btmch of long feathers
upon the head of a bird a plumicom as, the
; :
egre-fint, " See
eagle-fin. egrets of an owl. —
4. Same as aigret, 2. 6. In —
egregious (f-grCjuB), a. [< L. egregius, distin- hot.,the flying, feathery, or hairy down of seeds,
^i.sh('<l,
ex, out, +
surpassing, eminent, excellent, < e.
grex (ffreg-), flock: see gregarious.}
as the down of the thistle. 6. A monkey, Ma- —
cacus cynomolgtis, an East Indian species com-
Above the common beyond what ; is tisual ; ex-
monly seen in coiiflnement.— Great white egret,
I'urtico of tlie Tcjiiplc o( liUfuii, I'tuleinaic period.
traordinary, (at) In a good sense, distinguished ; re- the whiff hfi'>u of F.urope (Herodiaa nVm), or of America covered ways, fiat, and composed of Immense blocks of
markable. stone, reaching from one wall or stone epistyle beam to
Erictho another, the arch, although in all its fomts of frequent
'Bove Uinnder sits : to thee, egregiou* soule. use in drains and similar works, not being employed in
Let all Hesh bend. MarHon, Sophonisba, It. 1. architecture above ground, which holds consistently to
He might be able to adorn this present see, and famish the system of lintel-construction. (c) Columns, ntiinerous,
history with the leoords of egregioue exploits, both of art close, and massive, without bases, or with broad, fiat, low
and valoor. Dr. U. More, Antidote against Atheism. bases, antl exhibiting great variety in their capitals, from
This essay I Pope's "Essay on Man "I affords an ^^raiTious a simple Siiuare block to a wide-si)reading bell, elaborately
carvctl with palin-leaves or other forms suggested by vege-
Instance of the prwlominance of genius, the daxxling splen-
tation, especially in some adaptation of the lotus plant,
dour of imagery, and tiie seductive powers of eloquence.
butl, or fiower. (d) The employment of a large concave
Johneon, Pope,
molding to crown the entablature, decorated with vertical
(t) Now, more commonly In a bad or condemnatory sense, flutings or leaves, (e) Walls and columns decorated with
extreme; enormooa. a profusion of sculptures in incised outline, often of ad-
These last times, ... for Inaolency, pride, and egregious mirable precision (see caro-W/(<'t?o), or in low relief, rep-
contempt of all good order, are the wont resenting divinities, men, and animals, with innumerable
Hooter, Eccles. Polity, Pref., Iv. hieroglyphics, brilliant and tnie. though simple, coloring
Ah me, mr>at credulous fool,
being superadded. A remarkable feature of Egyptian
Bgrtgbnu mnrderer, architecture is the grandeur of its mechanical operations,
thief, anything
That s doe to all the as in cutting, polishing, sculpturing, and transporting
rillalns past, in being,
To come
• Shak., CymbeUne, t. 6.
enormous blocks of limestone and of granite, and in its
8tu|>endous excavations in the solid rock. The prototype
People that want sense do always in an eit'liotu man- of the Greek Doric order is to be sought in such Egyptian
ner want modesty. Steele, tatler, No. 47. columnar structures as the grotto-fa<;ades of Beni-Hassan;
Yon have made, too, some egregioue mistakes about and from the Egyptian lotus carvings and decoration were
English law, pointed out to me by one of the first lawyers American Great White H^,'rct > l[ero:iias tgrttta). developed many characteristic Assyrian decorative mo-
in the King's Bench. Sydney Smith, To Francis Jeflfrey. tives, as well as the Ionic capital and the graceful aiithe-
(Herodiasegretta), 3 feetor more in length, entirely white, mion-mohling of Greece. See mastaba, obelisk, pylon,
»SyiL (b). Huge, monstrooa, astonishing, surprising,
with a magnificent train of long, decomposed, fastigiate —
nnlque, exceptional, uncommon, unprecedented. pyramid, syrinx, 2, etc. Egyptian art, the architectu re,
plumes drooping far beyond the tail.— Little white sculpture, and painting of ancient Egypt, one of the most
egregionsly (f-gr^'jus-U), adv. In an egregious egret, the small white heron of Europe (Garzetta nivea), im|>ortant of the great artistic developments of the world.
manner. or of America {Garzetta candidissima), about 2 feet long. (See Egyptian architecture, above.) The earliest known
Egyptian 1856
Egyptian sculptures, not less than 6,000 year* old, exhibit The Emtptising image of the god of Heliopolis.
great technical skill, approach nature with remarkable C. O. Mailer, Manual of Archieol. (trans.), § 240.
ease and certainty, and far surpass in naturalness the Sameasi'oW-
more conventional works which succeeded them. Yet
Egyptologer
"*/_*:""«» V" J i' " .J ^> n.
(e-jip-tol'6-j6r), '"^
the best Egjptian works of all times possess striking in-
dividuality as well as reflnement, a very large proportion
WM
— : ; ;;
eightfold (at'fold), a. [< eight .^^^^^ -fold.] 1. Being one or the other of two, taken indif-
trmt's the number or quantity. [Scotch.] ferently or as the case requires: referring to
eighth (atth), a. and n. [< ME. eigtthe, eigh tethe, eilding (el'ding), «. Scotch form of elding. A two units or particulars of a class: as, it can
ehtuthe, etc., often contracted (being then like eileton (NGr. pron. e-le-ton'), n.j pi. eileta (-t&'). be done in either way; take either apple; the
the cardinal) eight, eighte, etc., often with Scand. [LGr. etXiiTdv, the corporal, < Gr. ti?J7T<Sf, Attic boat will land on either side.
term., eghterule, egtende, aghtand, ahtand, auch- eiX^A(, rolled, wound, verbal adj. of eli^iv, Attic spirits, when they pleaae,
tande, etc., < AS. eahtotha, ehteotha =
OS. ah- eiXeiv, roll, wind.] In the Gr. Ch., the cloth or Can either sex assume, or both.
todo =
OFries. achtunda D. achtste = =
OHG. covering, anciently- of linen, but now of silk, on Milton, P. L., i. 424.
dttandi =
Sw. dttonde Dan. ottende = =
Goth. ed, and which answers therefore to the corpo- each of two taken together but viewed
of two, or
ahtuda, eighth: as eight (AS. eahta, etc.), eight, ral of the Western Church, in the liturgies of Con- separately as, they took seats on either side.
:
a note having half the time-value of a quarter- Rom. 0/ the Rote, \. 217. And bothe hostes made to-geder grete ioye, as soone as
note; a quaver: marked by the sign 1^ or C, Like a willing patient, I will drink eyder of tern myght sen other. Merlin (E. E. T. S.), il. 148.
Potions of eyul 'gainst my strong infection. Lepidus flatters both,
or, when grouped, J^ r , T. Shak., Soimets, cxt Of both is flatter'd ;but he neither loves,
eighth-rest In musical notation, f Vinegar was deemed efflcacious In preventing contagion.]
(atth'rest), n. Nor either cares for him. Shak., A. and C, il. 1.
II ri- s t or sign for silence, equal in duration to an eisenrahm (i'zn-rftm), n. [G., lit. iron-cream:
.
2. Each two the one and the
of ; other. [See
fi^'hth-noto: marked by the sign *f. eisen E. iron ; rahm =
AS. rcdm, cream.] The = remarks under I., 2.]
eightieth (a'ti-eth), a. and n. [< ME. 'eigtethe, German name for a variety of hematite having The king of Israel and Jehoshaphat sat either of them
< AS. 'hundeahtigotha (= D. tachtigste =
OHG. a fine scaly structure, greasy feel, and cherry- on his throne. 2 Chron. xvlU. 9.
ahtozogosto, G. achtHgtte,eUi.): as eighty (AS. red color. It leaves a mark on paper, Either'a heart did ache
hundeahtatig, etc.) +
-elh, -th, ordinal suffix: eisodia, ». See isodia. A little while with thought of the old days.
see -f A3.] I. <i. Next after the seventy-ninth eisodicon, eisodikon, n. See isodicon. William Morris, Earthly Paradise, II. 294.
an ordinal numeral. eisteddfod (i-steiH'vod), n. ; pi. eisteddfodau (i- either (e'?^6r or i'THfer: see either, a., etym.),
n. The
tiuotient of unity divided by eigh-
n. steTH-vod'a). [W., a sitting, a session, assem- conj. [< ME. either, eyther, etc., awther, anther,
ty one of fiKlity equal parts.
; bly, esp. congress of bards or literati, < eistcdd, other, etc., contr. also or, which now prevails as
eightling (at'lina), n. [< eight -ling^.] + A sitting (as a verb, sit, be seated), + mod, a the second form in the correlation either . . .
com|M)un<l or twin crystal consisting of eight circle, inclosure.] An assembly; a meeting: or. Hence, with a negative prefixed, neither,
individuals, snoh ae are common witS rutile. specifically applied to a national assembly or q. V. See either, a. and 2)ron. ] 1 . In one case
117
" — :; —
Were but one danger. Shak., Cor., iii. 1. to lift a liquid or a finely divided solid,
Saraziues, mith^r for povertee, or for symplenesse, or elles such as sand, dust, or ashes. In the sim-
for here owne wykkeduesse. Mandeoille, Travels, p. 141. Every look or glalice mine eye ejecte
plest form two pipes are placed one
Shall check occasion.
Eithtr he is talking, or he is pursuing, or he is In a within the other, the larger one having
joamey, or peradveuture he sleepeth, 1 Ki, xviit 27. B. Jonson, Every Man in his Humour, ii. 1.
a conical shape at the place where the
CAia. Twas he in black and yellow. Specifically —
2. To dismiss, as from office, oc- smaller one enters it. A jet of steam or
air passing from the smaller pipe upward
Duch. Nay, 'tis no iimtter, either for himself cupancy, or ownership ; turn out : as, to eject
Or for the affection of his colours. into the larger pipe tends to cause any
MiddUton, ilore Dissemblers Besides Women, ii. 1.
an unfaithful officer ; to eject a tenant. liquid, as oil or water, within reach to
The French king was again ejected when our king sub- rise in the larger pipe. In oil-wells such
2. In any case ; at all used adverbially, for
:
mitted to the Church. Dryden. a device is used to raise the oil to the
emphasis, after a sentence expressing a nega- Old incumbents in office were ejected without ceremony, surface. In another form of ejector, for
tion of one or two alternatives, or of all alter- to make way for new favorites. lifting water, the smaller pipe enters a
Prctcott, Ferd. and Isa., iL 19. bend of the larger pipe near the top, the
natives: corresponding to too similarly used force of the jet tending to lift water
after affirmative sentences: as, he tried it, and = Sy]l. 1. To emit, extrude.—-2. To oust, dislodge. through the pipe from below. The steam-
didn't succeed; then I tried it, but I didn't eject (e-jekf), n. [< L. ejectum, neut. of ejeetus, ejector is also used to lift ashes from the
succeed, either. That's mine ; no, it isn't, either. pp. ot eicere, ejicere, eject : see eject, v.] That furnace-room of a steamer and to dis-
which is ejected; specifically, in j)A8to«., a re- charge them through a pipe passing over- Ejector.
[Colloq.] board above the water-line. The ejector
ejaculate (e-jak'u-lat), V. ; pret. and pp. ejacu- ality whose existence is inferred, but which is is also used to exhaust the air of a vacuum-brake ; in this
lated, ppr. ejaculating. [< L. ejaculatus, pp. of outside of, and from its nature inaccessible to, case the steam-jet moves a column of air instead of water,
ejaculari (> F. ejaculer = Pg. ejacular), oast the consciousness of the one making the infer- (c) A device for throwing cartridge-shells from a firearm
after firing. The common ejector of single- and double-
out, throw out, < e, out, + jaculari, throw, dart, ence : thus, the consciousness of one individual barreled breech-loaders is a bolt underneath the gun-bar-
< jaculum, a missile, a dart, < jacere, throw is an eject to the consciousness of any other. rel, with a head fitted to the rim of the bore, working au-
see eject, jet^.'] I, tram. 1. 'To throw out; But the inferred existence of your feelings, of objective tomatically back and forth in closing and opening tiie
them similar to those among my feelings,
cast forth ; shoot out ; dart. [Archaic, except groupings among arm ; in the latter movement the head catches against the
and of a subjective order in many respects analogous to rim of the shell and pushes it out of the barrel. There
in technical use.] —
my own these inferred existences are in the very act of are many other devices, as a spring-lever, etc.— Casual
If he should be disposed to do nothing, do you think inference thrown out of my consciousness, recognized as ejector. See casual.
that a party or a faction strong enough ... to ejaculate outside of it, as not being a part of me. I propose, ac- ejector-condenser (e-jek'tor-kon-den's6r), n.
Mr. Van Buren out of the window would permit cordingly, to call these inferred existences ejects, things
thrown out of my consciousness, to distinguish them from In a steam-engine, a form of condenser operated
. . .
ejaculation (e-jak-u-la'shon), n. [< L. as if been cast out ; ejecta ; refuse. ejulationt (ej-9-la'shon), n. [< L. ejulatio(n-),
< ejulare, also deponent hejulari, wail, lament,
*ejaculatio{n-), < ejaculari, throw out: see ejae- Facts . .indicate that a considerable portion of the
.
new mountain may be composed of ejectamenta. < heu, hei, ei, an exclamation of grief or fear.]
uiate.'] 1 . The act of throwing or shooting out
a darting or easting forth. [Archaic, except
Science, V. 66. An outcry; a wailing; a loud cry expressive of
in technical use.] ejection (e-jek'shon), n. [< L. ejecUo{n-), < ejee- grief or pain; mourning; lamentation.
tus, pp. of eicere, ejicere, eject.] 1. "The act of No ejulation
The Scripture calleth envy an evil eye . . so that still
; .
there seemeth to be acknowledged, in the act of envy, an ejecting, or the state of being ejected^ expul- Tolled her knell ; no dying agony
cjacMiad'oHorirradiation of tlie eye. Bacon, Envy(ed. 1887). sion; dismissal; dispossession; rejection. Frown'd in her death.
J. Beaumont, Psyche, xvili. 53.
2. The uttering of exclamations, or of brief Then followed those tremendous adventures, those perils
by sea, by wreck, by false brethren, by envious searchers Instead of hymns and praises, he breaks out into ejula-
exclamatory phrases ; that which is so uttered. those ejecti07is upon islands, those labours by the way, tiojis and effeminate wailings. Government of the Tongue.
;
The eiaculatioTis of the heart being the body and soule which complete in me the portrait of St. Paul.
of Diuine worship. Purchas, Pilgrimage, p. 35. Bale, in K. W. Dixon's Hist. Church of Eng., xxi.
ejurationt (ej-8-ra'shqn), n. [< LL. ejuratio^n-),
ejeratio{n-), an abjuring, a resigning, < L. yu-
Which prayers of our Saviour [Mat. xxvi. 39], and others Our first parent comforted himself, after his ejection out
of like brevity, are properly such as we call ejaculations; of Paradise, with the foresight of that blessed seed of the rare, ejerare, abjure, renounce, resign, < e, out,
an elegant similitude from a dart or arrow, shot or thrown woman which should be exhibited almost four thousand -f jurare, swear.] Solemn disavowal or renun-
out. South, Works, II. iv. years after. Bp. Hall, Select Thoughts, § 30. ciation. Bailey, 1727.
When a Moos'lim is unoccupied by business or amuse- Some of these alterations are only the ejections of a eka-. [< Skt. elca, one. Cf. dui-.] In chem., a
ment or conversation, he is often heard to utter some pi- word for one that appeared to him more elegant or more
ous ejaculation. E. W. Lane, Modern Egyptians, I. 359.
prefix attached to the name of an element and
intelligible. Johnson, Pref. to Shakespeare.
forming with it a provisional name for a hypo-
8. Specifically, in physiol. the emission of se- 2. That which is ejected ; matter thrown out or thetical element which, according to the periodic
,
men ; a seminal discharge : as, the vessels of expelled. system of Mendelejeff, should have such proper-
qaeulation. They [laminated beds alternating with and passing into ties as to stand in the same group with the ele-
There is hereto no derivation of the seminal parts, nor obsidian] are only partially exposed, being covered up by
any passage from hence, unto the vessels of ejaculation. modern ejections. Darwin, Geol. Observations, i. 62. ment to which the prefix is made and next to it.
For example, eka-aluminium was the provisional name
Sir T. Browne, Vulg. Err., iii. 4. Action of ejection and intrusion, in Scots law, an ac- given by Mendelejeff to a hypothetical element which in
brought when lands or houses are violently taken pos-
ejaculator (f-jak'u-la-tor), n. [< NL. ejaculator, tion session of by another, for the purpose of recovering pos-
the periodic system should have such properties as to stand
< L. e/dCM/oW, throw out : see ejaculate.'] One session witli damages and violent profits. Letters of in the s.ame group as aluminiimi and next to it. The
recently discovered element gallium agrees in properties
who or that which ejaculates gaculator urinse, ejection, in Scots law, letters under the royal signet, au- with those ascril>ed to eka-aluminium, and this name is
ejaculator semlnis, the muscle of the penis which expels thorizing the sheriff to eject a tenant or other possessor now abandoned.
the semen and urine from the urethra. Also called accele- of land who had been decreed to remove, and who had
(ek), V. t.; pret. and pp. elced, ppr. eking.
ratf/r ttriiue. disobeyed a charge to remove, proceeding on letters of eke
ejaculatory (e-jak'u-la-to-ri), a. and re. [= Pg. horning on the decree. .
[Early mod. E. also eelce, eek; < ME. eken, also
It. ejaculatorio, < l^L. ejaculatorius, < ejacula- ejecti've (e-jek'tiv), a. [< e/ect +-iue.] 1. Per- assibilated echen (> E. dial, etch), < AS. ecan
tor: see ejaculator.] I. a. 1. Casting forth; taining to ejection; casting out; expelling. yean, icon (pret. ecte, pp. eced) (= OS. okian,
throwing or shooting out ; also, suddenly shot, It was the one thing needful, I take it, to prove that the ocon =
OHGr. ouhhoti, ouchon, auhhon Icel.=
cast, or darted out. [Archaic, except in tech- sun is an orb possessing intense eruptive or ejective energy. auka (pret. emkadhi) =
Sw. oka =
Dan. oge),
Fortnightly Rev., N. S., XL. 422. increase, cause to grow ; secondary form, prop,
nical use.]
Giving notice by a small bell, so as in 120 half minutes,
2. In philos., of the nature of an eject. [Re- caus. of *edcan (pret. *c<}c, pp. edcen), only in
or periods of the bullet's falling in the ejaculatorie spring, cent.] the pp. edcen (= OS. ocan, giocan), as adj., in-
the clock part struck. Evelyn, Diary, Feb. 24, 1656. This conception symbolizes an indefinite number of creased, enlarged, made pregnant, =
OS. *6can
2. Uttered in ejaculations ; spoken with an in-
ejects, together with one oI>ject which the conception of
each eject more or less resembles. Its character is there-
=
Icel. auka (pret. jok) =
Goth, aukan (pret.
terrupted, exclamatory utterance. fore mainly ejective in respect of what it symbolizes, but
aiauk), intr., grow, increase; =
L. aupere, in-
The Church hath at all times used prayers of all variety, mainly objective in respect of its nature. crease; prob. connected with Gr. av^avetv, av-
long and short, ejaculatory, determined, and solemn. W. E. Clifford, Lectures, II. 74. ^civ, increase, which is akin to E. wax, increase.
Jer. Taylor, Polem. Discourses, Pref. ejectively (f-jek'tiv-li), adv. 1. By ejection. 'Seneeeke,adv.imdconj.] If. To increase; en-
We are not to value ourselves upon the merit of ejaeu-
latory repentances, that take us by tits and starts.
— 2. Inphilbs., as an eject. [Becent.] large; lengthen; protract; prolong.
Mental existence is already known to them ejectively, God myghte not a poynte my joies eehe.
Sir R. L'Bstrange. although, as may be conceded, never thought upon sub- Chaucer, Troilus, ilL 1609.
3t. Sudden; hasty. — 4. In physiol., pertain- jectively. N. A. Rev.,CXL.2U.
Spare, gentle sister, with reproch my paine to eelce.
ing to ejaculation ; pro'viding for the emission ejectment (e-jekt'ment), n. [< eject +
ment.'] Spenser, F. Q., III. vi. 22.
of semen, etc. : as, ejaculatory seminal vessels. An ejecting or casting out ; specifically, a dis-
— Haculatory duct or canal See duet. possession ; the act of dispossessing or ousting. 2. To add to; supply what is lacking to; in-
H.t n. Same as ejaculation, 2. crease, extend, or make barely sufficient by ad-
Driving him [the devil] out, in the face of the whole
Divine ejacuiatorieg, and all those aydes against devils. congregation, by exorcisms and spiritual ejectments.
dition : usually followed hy out: as, to eke out a
Martton, Dutch Courtezan, iv, l. Warburton, Doctrine of Grace, ii. 4. piece of cloth to eke out a performance.
;
) ;: ) ;
1S89 Elachlstns
to eke my smarte*
More bent treme of any quality, but especially any extrav- pletion or perfection. -Elaborative faculty, in
Then to reward my trusty true intent, agant or hyperbolical saying. psychol., the intellectual power of discerning relations
She gan for me devise a grievous punishment. and of viewing objects by means of or in relations the ;
Spenser, F. Q., III. vll. 55. Necessitie . . . made him . . . stretch his braines as understanding, as defined by the German philosophers
high as £ (a to see how he could recouer pence to defray the discursive faculty; thought: a phrase introduced by
In order to eke out the present page, I could not avoid his charges. Greene, Never Too Late. SirWilliam Hamilton.
pursuing the metaphor. Goldmnith, The Bee, No. 5.
There are some expressions in it [Dryden's "State of In- elaborator (f-lab'o-ra-tor), n. [= F. elabora-
It waa their custom, from father to son, to eke out the nocence"] that seem straln'd and a note beyond E la. teur, < L. as if "elaborator, < elaborare, elabo-
frugal support derived from this little domain by the busi- Langbaine, Dram. Poets (ed. 1891), p. 72.
ness of a smith, to which the oldest son was habitually rate : see elaborate, ».] One who or that which
brought up. Everett, Orations, II. 5. elaboracy (e-lab'o-ra-si), n. [< elaborate, a.: elaborates.
ME. eke, also assibilated eche, <
see -acij!\ Illaboration. [Rare.] elaboratory (f-lab'o-ra-to-ri), a. and n. [< elab-
eke (ek), n. [<
orate +-ory. As a noun, titter laboratory.] I. a.
AS. edca, an increase, 'edcan, increase: see
< A minute elaboracy of detail.
P. Robinson, Harper's Weekly, June 7, 1884, p. 367. Elaborating; tending to elaborate. [Eare.]
eke, v.l Something added to something else.
Specifically — (a) A short wooden cylinder on whicn a bee- elaborate (f-lab'o-rat), v. ; pret. and pp. elabo- Il.t n. laboratory. A
hire is placed to increase its capacity when the bees have rated, ppr. elaborating. [< L. elaboratus, pp. of He shew'd us divers rare plants, caves, and an elabora-
comb.
flUed it with [Scotch.)
elaborare ( > It. elaborare Sp. Pg. elaborar =
F. tory. =
Evelyn, Diary, Aug. 1, 1665.
Neighbour defines eke as half a hive placed below the '^laborer), labor greatly, work out, elaborate, < In this retreat of mine, shall I have the use of mine
main hive, while a whole hive used in the same way is
called a " nadir." Phin, Diet. Apiculture, p. 31. e, out, +
laborare, labor: see labor, r.] I. trans. elaboratory t Scott, Kenilworth, xviii.
1. To produce with labor; work out; produce elabrate (e-la'brat), a. [< NL. "elabratus, < L.
(6) Same as eking, 2.
eke (ek), adv. and conj. [< ME. eke, eek, ek, ec,
in general. e- priv. labrum, lip: see labrttm.] Having +
< AS. edc =
OS. ok =
OFries. dk D. ook = =
The honey, that is elaborated by the bee, . . . affords a no labrum : an epithet applied in entomology
LG. dk, ok, auk OHG. ouh, ouch, MHG. ouch, great deal of pleasure to the bee herself.
= to the mouth when it has no distinct labrum or
Boyle, Works, II. 355.
G. auch =
Icel. auk =
Sw. och =
Dan. og, and, upper lip, as in the spiders and most IHptera.
Or, in full Joy, elaborate a sigh. Young, Love of Fame.
also, =
Goth, auk, for, also; prob. the adverbial Elacate (e-lak'a-te), n. [NL., < Gr. ij^xiKaTTj, dial.
If the Orchideae had elaborated as much pollen as Is pro- T/Z-aKara, aXaadra, a distaff.] The typical genus
ace. of a noon (cf. Icel. at auk, besides, to boot,
duced by other plants, relatively to the number of seeds
AS. to edcan, besides, moreover), < AS. "edcan, which they yield, they would have had to produce a most of fishes of the famUy Elacatidce. E. canada is a
food-flah of the Atlantic coast of North America and the
etc., increase: see eke, v.] Also: likewise; in extravagant amount, and this would have caused exhaus- West Indies, reaching a length of 5 feet and a weight of
addition. [Obsolete or archaic] tion. Darwin, Fertil. of Orchids by Insects, p. 288. from 15 to 20 pounds. It is variously known as the ser-
The emperour & eek sibile spoken prophesie. Specifically —
2. To improve or refine by suc- geant-Jish, coaljish, bonito, cubby-yew or cobia, and cra6-
eater. See cut under cob(a.
And thei acordiden bothe in feere. cessive operations ; work out with great care
Hymns to rirjrin, etc. (E. E. T. 8.), p. 45. work up fully or perfectly. elacatid (e-lak'a-tid), n. fish of the family A
Elacatidce.
Up Vt» rose, ap rose the lyon eke. There has been up to the present day an endeavour to
Spenser, F. (J., I. UL 21. explain every existing form of life on the hypothesis that Elacatidffi
(el-a-kat'i-de), n. pi. [NL., < Ela-
A traln-band captain eke was he it has been maintained for long ages in a state of balance cate -idee.] +
family of scombrrform fishes, A
Of famous London town. Cowper, John Gilpin. or else on the hypothesis that it has been elaborated, and of fusiform shape, with depressed head, smooth
is an advance, an improTement, upon its ancestors.
scales, lateral line concurrent with the back,
ekeberglte (ek'e-b*rg-it), ». [After the Swed- B. R. Lankester, Degeneration, p. 29.
A
variety of scapo- eight free spines representing the first dorsal
ish mineralogist £keberg.'] Often ... a speaker's thought is not weighty enough fin, a long second dorsal and anal fin, and acute-
lite. to sustain elaborated style of any kind, and, least of all,
(ek'nam), n. [ME. ekename, ekitame elaborated imagery. A. Phelps, English Style, p. 285. ly lobed tail. The cranium is also characteristic. The
ekenamet type is the cobia or sergeant-fish, Elacate Canada. See
(= Icel. auknafn = Sw. oknamn = Dan. ope- II. intrang. To be or become elaborate ; be cut under cobia.
rtavn), an added name, < eke, an addition, in- elaborated. [Bare.] elacatoid (e-lak'a-toid), a. and n. I. a. Of or
crease, eton, add, + name, name : see eke and
This custom [of borying a dead man's movables with pertaining "to the Elacatidte.
name. Hence, by misdividing an ekename as a
him] elaborates as social development goes through its n. n. An
elacatid.
nekename, the form nickname, q. v.] An added earlier stages. //. Speneer, Prin. of Sociol., i 103.
elachert (el'a-ch^rt), n. Same as degote.
name; an epithet; a nickname. Bee nickname. elaborate (e-lab'o-rat), a. [= F. 6labori Sp. = Elachistea (el-a-kis'te-ft), n. [NL., < Gr. e^-
We have thousand* of instances ... of such eke-names Pg. elabora'do =; It.' elaborato, < L. elaboratus, X'trrof, superl. oK eXa;i;i>f, "small.] A
small genus
or epithet-names being adopted by the person concerned. of olive-brown filamentous marine algie, be-
pp.: see the verb.] Wrought with labor ; fin-
AretuBoioffia, XUII. 110(1871).
ished with great care and nicety of detail much ; longing to the Phaosporea; whieh grow in small
ekia (e'ki-ft), n. The wild African dog. studied execut«d with exactness ; highly fin-
; tufts attached to other algae, especially Fucaceee.
eking (e'kmg), n. [Also ekeing; early mod. E. ished as, an elaborate discourse; an elaborate
:
The basal part of the tuft is composed uf densely packed
branching filaments, which at the surface branch corym-
also eeking; < ME. 'eking, echinge ; verbal n. of performance.
bosely, so as to form a layer of short fllanienta(paraphyseB).
eke, c] 1. The act of adding. The Expressions are more florid and elaborate in these At the base of the latter are bunie the sporangia and a
I dempt there much to have eeked mj store. Descriptions than in most otlier Part* of the Poem. series of long, unltranched filaments. Elachistea /ucicola
But such eekittg hath made my hart sore. Addison, Spectator, No. S21. la the commonest species in Great Britain and America.
Spenser, Shep. CaL, Scptemlwr. His style would never have been elegant ; but it might Elachistlnffi (el'a-kis-ti'ne), n. pi. [NL., < Ela-
2. That which is added. SpeciOcally —(a) A piece of at least hare been manly and perspicuous ; and nothing chistiis + -tH(r.] A subfamily of insects, of the
wood fitted to make good a deficiency in length, as the but the moat elaborate care could possibly have made it ?arasitic hymenopterous family Chalddidte.
end of a laiee of a tblp and the like. so bad as it is. Macautay, Mitford^s Hist Greece. hey have four-jointed tarsi, slender hind thighs, distinct
Ekeing is the name given to the timber which, resting What an elaborate theory have we here. parapsides, and a submarginal vein reaching the costa
upon the shelf, ekes out or fills up the spacea between the Ingeniously nursed ap, pretentiously without a break. The species are all parasitic, and some
apron and the foremost beam, and between the stem post Brought forth Brouming, Ring and Book, 1. 177.
I of the larvai spin Irregiilar cocoons, differing in this re-
and aftermoat beam— the deck hook and deck transom spect from most other Chalcididcs.
= ftjm. labored, wrought
perfected, highly
. . connecting the two sides.
.
elaborately (e-lab'o-r&t-li), adv. In an elab- f
EiadliBtodon (el-a-kis'to-don), n. [NL., < Gr.
TkearU, Naval Arch., i 210. /ajtiarof superl. oif ilaxtk, small, + odoif (orfoir-),
orate manner; with elaboration ; with nice re-
,
(&) The carved work under the lower part of the quarter- tooth.] A genus of Indian colubriform serpents
piece of a ship at the aft part of the quarter-galleiy. Also gard to exactness.
of the subfamily Dasypeltince, having esopha-
eke. I beleeve that Ood is no more niov'd with a prayer elab-
orately pend, then men truely charitable are mov'd with
geal teeth formed by enameled processes of cer-
eklogite, <•• See eclogite. vical vertebne projecting into the gullet (as in
the peiiM speech of a Bagger. Milton, Eikonoklastes, xxiv.
elH, n. An obsolete spelling of ellX.
the genus Dasypeltis), but smooth scales, head
el-, n. See elP. elaborateness (S-lab'd-r&t-nes), n. The qual-
little distinct from the body, a grooved maxil-
el-. [L. el-, < Gr. i>^, assimilation of h- before ity of being elaborate, or wrooght with great
lary tooth, and a loreal plate. E. westermanni
A.] An
assimilated form of en-^ before I, as labor.
is an example. Reinhardt, 1863.
in el-lijnge. Yet it [the " Old Batchelor ") is apparently composed
(el-a-kis'tus), n. ||NL. (Spinola,
-el^. [ME. -el, < AS. -el, a noon-snffix, prob. with great elaborateness of dialogue, and incessant ambi- ElachisttlB
tion of wit Johnson, Congreve. 1811), < Gr. iyixunof, superl. of e^xixvc, small.]
orig. same as -ere, E.'-er. Cf. -al, -ar, and see The typical genus of ElachisHnte (which see),
-lei. See-er^.] A suffix of Anglo-Saxon origin, elaboration (e-lab-5-ra'shon), n. [= F. Elabo-
forming noims, originally denoting the agent, ration =
Sp. ehibordcion ="Pg. elaboracHo It. =
from verbs, as in runnel: in modem English, elaborazione, < L. elaboratio{ri-), < elaborare:
except after n, usually written 4e, as in bead-le, see elaborate.'] 1. The act of elaborating, or
beetJe^, beet-W^, etc. See -iei. working out or producing production or for- ;
-ellus, -ella, -ellum, parallel to -iUus, etc., being tion of sap by a tree.
ngnally dim. -{u-«, with assimilation of a preced- Elaboration is a gradual change of structure, in which
ing consonant. The suffix -( (-lo-, -lus, -el, etc. the organism becomes adapted to more and more varied
is a common Indo-European formative, with and complex conditions of existence.
E. R. Lankester, Degeneration, p. 32.
different U8es,diminutive, agential, or adjective.
It appears also in -l-et, q. v. (2) See -al, etc.] 2. The act of working out and finishing with
1. A
suffix originally and still more or less di- great care and exactness in detail the act of ;
system it was the highest tone: hence often with minute attention to completeness and to sitic upon tortrlcid larv». Sometimes wrongly spelled
tued by the old dramatists to denote the ex- details ; laboriously bringing to a state of com- EUichestus.
; !
of apetalous exogens, scattered over the north- wooti of Natal. E. glaucum is a native of Ceylon and elaiodic acid.
Coromandel, and is icnown by the name of Ceylon tea. Same
em nemisphere. They are trees or shrubs, covered Elseodes (el-e-6'dez), n. [NL. (Eschseholtz, as
elaiometer (el-a-om'e-tfer), «. as elceom-
with silvery or brown scales, and having alternate or op- etcr.
posit* leaves, and small white or yellow Howers. There Eleodes), < Gr. i/.aiMtig, contr. of c?Mioeidr/g, oily, elaldehyde [< Gr. l)i.(ainv),
(e-lal'de-hid), n.
are only 3 genera, JCteewrnuj^, Ilii>i^>phae^ and Shep/ierdui, < £?Miov, olive-oil, oil, +
eiiSof, appearance.] A oil, -1- In chem., a solid polymeric
tildehydc.'i
including alwut 20 species, of which 4 are American. genus of beetles, of the family Teiicbrioiiidie, modification of acetaldehyde, containing three
Elseagnus (el-e-ag'nus), n. [NL., < Gr. iTialay- containing large species with the tarsi spinose
i>of,'a Boeotian mareh-plant, perhaps
molecules in one. Perhaps identical with par-
jof or f /.fo) or setose, and the connate elytra partly em-
myrica, sweet gale, < fAa/a, olive-tree, + ijvof, bracing the body: so called from the oily fluid
aldehyde.
equiv. to Xi'yof, a willow-Uke tree: see agnus Elamite (e'lam-it), n. and a. [< Elam (see def.)
discharged by the insects when iiTitated. There 4- -(7e2.] 1, n. An inhabitant of ancient Elam,
castas, under agtitis.'i A genus of shrubs or are about 50 species, all of the United States, where they
small trees, the type of the order Elaagnacece, take the place of the species of Ulaps in the old world. a country east of Babylonia, commonly regard-
of about 20 species. The fruit, sometimes edible, is E. obscura and E. gigantea are examples ; the latter is \\ ed as corresponding nearly to the old province
a spurious drupe formed of the fleshy calyx-tube inclosing inches long. The fluid, as in Blaps, is secreted by two of Susiana in Persia (now Khuzistan).
glands near the anus, and is sometimes ejected to a dis- II. a. Pertaining to Elam or the Elamites.
tance of three or four inches. It has a penetrating and
indescribably offensive odor. Also spelled Eleodes. elampt (e-lamp'), V. i. [< L. e, out, E. lamp: +
see ?a»jj).] To shine.
elaeodochon (el-f-od'o-kon), «.; pi. ela'odocha
As when the cheerful sun, elamping wide,
(-kii)- [^ Gr. e?Mio66xo( or -66ko(, holding oil, <
Glads all the world with his uprising ray.
ihiiov, olive-oil, oil, -I- ScxcoBac, MKcaBai, receive, G. Eleteher, Christ's Victory and Triumph, i.
contain.] The uropygial gland or rump-gland This, indeed, is deformed by words neither English nor
of a bird; the oil-gland, a kind of sebaceous Latin, l)ut simply barbarous, as elamping, eblazon, depros-
foUicle saddled upon the pope's-nose at the trate, purpured, glitterand, and many others.
Hallaiii, Introd. Lit. of Europe, iii. 5.
root of the tail.
It is composed of 61an (a-lon'), n. [F., < elancer, shoot, incite,
numerous slender refl. rush forward, dash: Beeelance.l Ardor in-
tubes or follicles,
spired by enthusiasm, passion, or the like ; dash.
which secrete the
greasy fluid, aud elance (e-lans'), v. t. [< F. ^lancer, < e- (L. e),
the ducts of which, out, +
lancer, dart, hurl, < lance, a lance.] To
uniting successive- throw or shoot hurl dart. [Rare.] ; ;
ly in larger tubes,
flnally open by one While thy uneiTing hand elanc'd
or more pores, com- Another, and another dart, the people
monly upon a little Joyfully repeated lo
nipple-like eleva- Prior, tr. of Second Hymn of Callimachus.
tion. Birds press Elanee thy thought, and think of more than man.
out a drop of oil Young, Night Thoughts, ix.
with the beak, and
{Eiaa^us angiisti/otia). dress the feathers eland (e'land), n. [< D. eland, an elk (in South
Flowering Branch of Oleaster
a, fruit b, section of same. with it,in the opera- -Africa applied to the eland), G. elend, elen =
;
tion called preen- Top of Pope's-nose of a Skua Gull {Sterco- (> P. Man), elendthier, elk, < Lith. elnis Pol. =
the one-seeded nut. .Several species are cultivated for ing. The gland is
large and always
rariits parasiticus).
E, elaeodochon, or oil-gland, with circlet
jelen' =
OBulg. jeleni, elk. See e^-l.] 1. The
their ornamental silvery-scurfy foliage, especially the ole- of feathers C, C, upper tail-coverts ; R, Cape elk, Oreas canna, a large bubaline ante-
aster, E. angxKtifolia, of Europe, and several variegated present in aquatic ;
compressed and but sparingly bristled, contrary to the in Transylvania, containing sodalite and spinel, as ditroite. and the animal as large as an ox, it seems strange that it
rule in Tyrannidce ; the feet are feeble and the wings gen-
elaeometer (el-e-om'e-t6r), n. [< Gr. elaiov, has not yet been introduced into England. Livingstone.
erally short. The prevailing colors are olive greens and
olive-oil, oil, + 'fierpov, a measure.] A hydrom- 2. A name sometimes used for the moose.
browns, whence the birds are collectively known as olive-
tyrants. They are distributed over all the Neotropical eter for testing the purity of olive- and al- elanet (el'a-net), n. [< Elanus + dim. -et.] A
region, reacliing to the border of the United States. The mond-oils by determining their densities. Also kite or gle'de of the genus Elanus. G. Cmier.
limits of the subfamily are not fixed ; Sclater admits 19 [NL. (G. E. Gray,
genera. Also Ebmwhue, Elceiiince, Elaineinoe, Elaininte.
claiometer. Elanoides (el-a-noi'dez), n.
elseoblast (e-le'o-blast), n. [< Gr. ilmov, oil, + elseoptene (el-f-op'ten), n. [< Gr. IXaiov, olive- 1848, after VielUot, 1818), < Elanus Gr. tWof.] +
oil, oil, + nrrjvS^, winged.] The liquid portion A genus of birds, of the family Falconidw; the
germ.] In zool. the urochord of certain
jS'/MOTdg, ,
of volatile oils, as distinguished from the con- swallow-tailed kites. The tail is extremely long and
ascidians; a rudimentary notochord, occurring
crete or crystaUizable portion, called stearop- deeply forflcate, the wings are long and pointed, the feet
in the embryos of the salps.
tene (which see). Also elaopten, oleoptene.
The placenta becomes more sharply marked off from the (e-le-o-sak'a-rin), a. [< Gr.
body of the embryo, at the posterior end of which a struc- elaeosaccharine
ture known —
the equivalent of the note-
as the elceoblast f/.aiov, olive-oil, oil, oaKxapov, sugar.] Con- +
chord — makes appearance. .
its The embryo is bom taining both oil and sugar.
. .
as a small fully developed salpa, which, however, still elaic (e-la'ik), a. [< Gr. cTixuKd^, < tTuita, the
possesses the remains of the placenta and the elceoblast.
Claris, Zoology (trans.), II. 107.
olive-tree: see oUve.~\ Same ae oleic.
elaidate (e-la'i-dat), n. [< elaidic -ofel.] In +
elaeoblastlc (e-le-o-blas'tik), a. [< elwohlast +
cliem., a salt formed by the union of elaidic
-tc.] Pertaining to the elseoblast acid with a base.
; composing
the eleeoblast: as, elceoblastic cells.
elaidic (el-a-id'ik), a. [< Gr. tkat( {cTjiiS-),
Elaeocarpus (e-le-o-kar'pus), equiv. to i'Aaia, the olive-tree, + -ic] Of or
n. [NL., < Gr.
i'/Ma, the olive-tree, -I- Kapird^, fruit.] A
genus pertaining to oleic acid or elain Elaidic acid,
of trees and shrubs, of the order Tiliacew, con- CjyH;i402, a fatty acid fonning crystalline leaflets, ob-
taining 50 species, natives of India and Aus- tained from oleic acid by adding nitrous or hyponitrous
tralia and the intervening islands. They have acid.
simple leaves and racemes of small flowers. The fruit is elaidin, elaidine (e-la'i-din), «. [< Gr. iy.aiq
an oblong or gloliose drupe, consisting of a rough bony (iX«((5-), the olive-tree, + -in^, 4ne^.] In chem.,
nut surrounded by a fleshy pulp. In India the fruit of Swallow-tailed Kite {Elanoides forjicatus),
several species is used in curries, or pickled like olives.
a fatty substance, white, crystalline, produced
Some species of Australia and New Zealand yield a light by the action of nitric acid upon certain oils, are small, and the bill is simple. The genus is related to
but very tough wfjod. especially castor-oil. yauclerus, of which it is held by some to be a subgenus.
The type is the swallow-tailed kite of the Ihiited States,
Elaeodendron (e-le-o-den'dron), n. [NL., < Gr. elain, elaine (e-la'in), n. [= F. Maine ; < Gr. which is white with a glossy-black mantle, » ings, and tail,
i'/Mia, the olive-tree, Shdpov, a tree.] + ce- i'Aaia, olive-oil, oil, A
-irfi, -ine^.'] The liquid + and about two feet long, the tail forming more than half
lastraoeous genus of small trees or shrubs, of principle of oils and fats: same as olein. the length when full-grown.
:
/tafkuiioM faralUlum, natural size. compressed, Species inhabit tropical and warm temper- spinal column running into the upper lobe the presence ;
Several years elaptd before such a vacancy offered It- W, from above: r, a, cerebral hemispheres, united
olfactory bulbs :
self by the death of the archprlest of Vzeda. in the middle line : *, thalamencephalon ^ c, mesencephalon ; rf, cere-
bellum ; aa, plaited bands formed by the restiform bodies ; /, //,
Pracott, Ferd. and Isa., 11. 5. /p', y, first (olfactory), second (optic), fourth, and fifth pairs of cere-
bral nerves ; /, medulla oblongata j w, a blood-vessel. B. from be-
2t. To pass out of view or consideration; suffer low, in part enlarged ! ck. optic chiasm : A, pituitary body ; n and
lapse or neglect. V, vessels connected with k; k, saccus vasculosus; p, pyramids of
medulla oblongata ; a, I. //, y, same as in ^.
Such great acts do facilitate our pardon, and hasten the
restitution, and in a few days comprise the elapted duty
or on the under surface of the head the gill-pouches and ;
taneous glands. and tranquillity of mind. In this state of silence to at- coid scales, forming shagreen or other armor. The division
tend the secret elap— and flowinga in of the Holy Spirit, of the group varies it is now usually divided into two sub-
;
Elaphomyces (el-a-fom'i-sez), n. [NL., < Or. that may flU their minds with peace and consolation, joys classes, lliilocephali and Plagiottomi, the latter including
adeer, + inioK, a mushroom.] A genus
i'fMf<K, orraptures. .ildd>son,Ban>arksonItaly(ed. Bohn), 1.531. the sliarks and the rays.
of subterranean fungi, belonging to the IVie- After an elapt of year*. Elasmodectes (c-las-mo-dek'tez), n. Same as
raceCB. ElaphomyteM frrannlatwi, the common species, AnnaU qf Pha. and Pmn., I. 533. Elasmoqnathus, 2.
produces nearly spherical tuber-like conceptacles, vary-
ing from the size ot a baielnut to that ot a walnut. The Elapsids (e-lap'si-de), n.pf. [NL., < Elaps + Elasmo'don (e-las'mo-don), n. [NL., < Gr. tAaa-
surface is eorered with fine -iVte.] Same as Elapidte. a thin plate (see Elasvius), + otSofcf (odovr-)
//of,
warts. The contents consist elapslon (e-lap'shon), n. [< elapse -ion.] The + = E. tooth.]^ A „genus of elephants,
.
the same . . >
chiefly of the black spores, net of elapsing ; lapse. E. Phillips, 1706. [Rare.] as Elephas proper, or Enclephas, containing the
from 1 to 8 in each ascus. Asiatic as distinguished from the African ele-
elaqneate (e-lak'^we-at), «. t. : pret. and pp.
Elaphrids (e-laf 'ri-de), elaqucated, ppr. elaqueating. [< L. elaqueatus, phant of the genus Loxodon : so named by Fal-
u. pi. [NL., < Elaph-
rus +
-itUe.] A family pp. of elaqueare, disentangle, < e, out, laqueiis, + coner from the laminar pattern of the molars.
a snare.] To disentangle. Coles, 1717. [Rare.] See first cut under elephant.
of Coleoptera, named Elasmognatha (el-as-mog na4ha),M.pf. [NL.,
Elaslpoda(el-a-8ip'6-da), n.pZ. [NL.] Same
from the genus Elaph- " neut.fl. otElasmognathm: Beeelasmognathous.]
iiH Elixmaunda.
'
and subfamily Cara- amiiulatory ambulacra contlned to the latter, and the £laSII10gIiathU8 (el-as-mog'na-thus), «. [NL.
bina. They are of small cephalic regi.;iiu8iially8i»;danzeiL_Al«iitMjipe^^^^
^^^ glag„,„p„athous.] 1. A genus of American
Sise and stout form, with the Sta/krus ri/ariui. known (all only recently), "f several genera, as Elpidia,
tljrtra tmpreased, the mandi- (Lias ibows natural itse.) KiAya, Irpa, etc. Also Elatipoda. tapirs, characterized by having the nasal sep-
; ; :
reptiles, of the order Sauropterygia, related to elasticity simply. See modMiu*.— Perfect elasticity, the
the plesiosaurs, but differing in the structure A volunteer navy may in some degree supply the place property of being perfectly elastic. See elastic, a., 2.
of privateers, supposing that plenty of time and an ctaidc elastlCneSS (e-las ' tik-nes), n. Elasticity.
of the pectoral arch. A species was upward of 40 feet organization are at command
long, aquatic and piscivorous, with a very long neck, small
Bailey, 1727. [Rare.]
J. B. Soley, Blockade and Cruisers, p. 169.
head, paddle-lilie limbs and tail, and long, sharp teeth. elastin (f-las'tin), n. [< elast-ic -f -iifi.] In
4. Possessing the power or quality of recover- chem., a body closely resembling albumen, ex-
Elasmotheriidae (e-las"m6-the-ri'i-de), n. pi. ing from depression or exhaustion; able to
+ cept that it is free from sulphur, forming the
[NL., < Elasmotherium '-idd.'i family ofA a depressing or exhausting influence;
resist principal substance of the elastic fiber which is
extinct perissodactyl quadrupeds, without ca-
capable of sustaining shocks without perma- the characteristic constituent of certain tissues.
nines or incisors, and with a crenulated longi-
nent injury as, elastic spirits.
:
elatchee (e-lach'e), n. [< Hind, elachi, ildchi.]
tudinal ridge on the lower molars a group hav- :
The herds are elastic with health. Landor. Cardamom.
ing relationships with both the horse and the
rhinoceros, but much more closely related to
the latter in the order of ungulates. Gill, 1872.
h«it.tn, a
belting, „,»,.,.,=i made
» material ,„ in ,,„.,.>. ,
,,. bands u.„ an
from half
several inches in width, plain or striped, and having thin
—
Curve of elastic resistance. See cmi-pc.— Elastic elate (e-laf), v. t.: pret. and pp. elated, ppr.
„„ inch to
.
elating,
,.
[< l. elatm, pp. of efferre, bring out,
,
elassomoid (e-Ias'o-moid), a. and n. I. a. Per- ter, or the like. [U. S.] elatewith empty hopes and glittering outsides.
taining to or having the characters of the Elas- elasticalt (e-las'ti-kal), a. [Seeetasft'c] Same Bacon, Moral Fables, i., Expl.
somidai. as elastic. Who feels his freehold's worth, and looks elate,
H. n. An elassome. A little prop and pillar of the state.
elastically (e-las'ti-kal-i), adv. In an elastic I. 176. Crabbe, Works,
elastic (e-Us'tik), a. and n. [Formerly also manner with elasticity or power of accommo- = Syn. 2. Exultant, jubilant, exhilarated,
;
fhe starry roof, and roll the orbs in air? NL.;e'«;tt«to( t-)s, elasticity, < elas-
/,>,!f ^ ^^^den elatement swells our minds.
Sir B. Blackmore. ticus, llt'^K
elastic see elastic and -ity.] The prop-
: Hervey, Meditations, ll. 64.
; ; ;;
one point to a spore, formed by the splitting of Elatinaceae (e-lat-i-na'sf-e), n. pi. [NL,, < mtnnate,— To Shake the elbOW; to gamble: from the
Elatine + -acece.'] An order of small polypeta- motion of sliaking a dice-box.
the outer coat of the spore. They are strongly hygro-
scopic, and aid in the dispersion of the spores, also keep. lous herbs with opposite leaves and axillary He's always shaking his heels with the ladies, and his
ing a small group together, as they leave the sporangium. flowers, including only 2 genera and about 20 elbows with the lords. Vanbrugh, Confederacy, i.
See cut under EqiiiMtaaa. (J) One of the long species; the waterworts. ^eo Elatine. Up to the elbows (in anything), very busy ; wholly en-
and slender fusiform cells of Hepaticai having Elatine (e-lat'i-ne), n. [NL., < L. elatine, a gaged or engrossed.
one or more spiral thickenings within. They plant of the genus Antirrhinum, < Gr. i^rivr/, a elbow (el'bo), V. [< elbow, n.] I. trans. 1. To
loosen the spores in the capsule at the time of species of toadflax, so called from some jesem- push or shove with or as if -vrith the elbow;
their dispersion, (c) One of the similar free blance to the fir or pine, fem. of ifdnvog, of the
hence, figuratively, to push or thrust by over-
filaments of Myxomycetes forming part of the fir or pine, < iUnj, the silver fir, prob. so call- bearing means crowd: as, to eiftoic people aside
;
capillitium, anil frequently having spiral thick- ed in reference to its straight, high growth, < in a crowd; to elbow a rival out of the way.
enings. They are sometimes furnished with i7jiT6i, verbal adj. of ifavveiv, drive, push see :
He'll . . . elbow out his neighbours. Dryden.
spines. Their characters are useful in distin- elastic, elater"^.] A
genus of very small annual I would gladly abandon, of my own free will, the part I
guishing species. —
3. [XL.] In entom.: (a) herbs, typical of the order Elatinacece, groW- have in her ilckle favour, but I will not be elbowed out of
it by the clown Sussex or this new upstart,
[cap.] The typical genus of the family Ela- ing in water or mud, and found in temperate
Scott, Kenilworth, xvi.
teridte, founded by Linneeus in 1767. it com. or subtropical regions around the globe, known
prises over lou species, of which nearly 50 inhabit North as tcaterujort. Four species occur in the United 2. To makeor gain by pushing as with the el-
America. They are mostly found in temperate regions,
States. bows: as, to elbom one's way through a crowd.
on leaves ami flowers, or oftener under Ixark. They are
di--<tiii;;uisbed from membera of related genera by the flli- elation (e-la'shon), n. [< ME. elacion, < L. ela- As some unhappy wight, at some new play.
fonn foiirtb tarsal Joint, oblong-oval scutellum, small reg- tio(n-), a carrying out, a lifting up, < elatus,pp.
At the pit door stands elbowing a way.
Qoldsmith, Good-natured Man, Epil.
ularly convex head, and the sinuate single-toothed dilata- of efferre, carry out, lift up: see elate.'] Elas-
tion of the hind coxK. One
(ft) of the Elateridte; a ticity of feeling due to some special cause or n. intrans. 1. To jut into an angle project ;
or rarely « in number; the labmm is Tree and visible elatrometer (el-a-trom'e-t«r), n. Genoa yellow damask, with a bed and elbow chairs of the
[< Gr. i>MHip, same stuff, adorned with fringes of blue silk,
and the anteume are usnallT serrate, sometimes filiform, a driver (see elater^, 1), -I- fUrpov, a measure.]
pectinate, or flabellate. The species are very numerous, Smollett, tr, of Gil Bias, x, 8.
and are known as elidc-butla, mapping-beelUt, ipring- In phygics, an Instrument for measuring the Necessity invented stools,
bettiet, and tHfjackt. Their legs are abort, and when degree of rarefaction of the air in the receiver Convenience next suggested elbow-chairs.
they are placed on their backs on a flat snrface they right of an air-pump. Cowper, Task, i, 87,
theroaelres with an audible snapping of their bodies. Als
is effected by means of the spine of Uie prostemnm, which
elajrle (el a-il), n. [< Gr. I'kaiov, olive-oil, oil, elbow-cuff (el'bo-kuf), n. An attachment to
acta as a spring on the mesostemnm, and the force being +
i/.rj, matter.] Same as ethylene. the short elbow-sleeve of a woman's dress, worn
transmitted to the base of the elytra, and so to the sup- Elberfeld blue. See blue, n. about 1775. The cuff is or appears to be turned
porting surface, the inaects an jerked Into the air and elbow (el'bo), n. [= Sc. elbuek; < ME. elbowe,
manage to fall on their feet. The force Is remarkable, a^ back so as to cover the elbow like a cap.
one may experience by trying to hold one of the huger <
AS. rhiliof/a, and contr. elboga (= D. elleboog elbowed (el'bod), a. [< elbow + -cd2.] Sup-
spedea. (See cut under WKt-&rc(fc.) The fireflies of tnp. =
L(f. rlh hage =
OHG. elinpogd, elinpogo, ellin- plied with or shaped like an elbow specifically, ;
ical regiona are elaten, as of the genos Fyrophonu. (See bogo, MH(t, ctenboge, G. ellenboge, elboge Ice!. = in en torn., turning at an angle; kneed; genicu-
cut under antenna.) The lanra of many specM are known oinbogi, and contr. olbogi, now olbogi, formerly late: &s, elbowed eMtennee; elbowed Taarka. West-
as irireHomw, and are very injuriooa to cropa. See cut
un<ler vfireworm.
alnbogi, albogi Dan. = alhue; cf. 8w. armb&ge), wood.
elaterill,elaterine(e-lat'e-rin),n. l<elaier-ium elbow, < eln, eU, in the orig. sense of 'forearm,' Picks, having straight tips converging to the eye. Instead
+ -in-, -ini-.] A neutral principle (C2oH2g05) +
boga, a bow, in the orig. sense of 'a bend': of being curved, are said to be elbowed or anchored.
extracted by alcohol from elatenum. when pure see eft and 6oKj2. Ct. ulna &nA cubit.] 1. The Wm. Morgan, Man, of Mining Tools, p, 74,
It forma colorless hexagonal crystals, which are odorless bend of the arm ; the angle made by bending elbow-gauntlet (el'bo-gant'let), n. A gaunt-
anil have a bitter, acrid taste. It is used in medicine in the arm at the junction of the upper arm with let of which the cuff covers the forearm nearly
minute doses as a very powerful hydragogne cathartic. the forearm. to the elbow-joint, it is sometimes prolonged on the
elateriflt(6-lat'§-ri8t),». {_< elater^ +-ist.^ One
prelde to god for hem bothe ladyes and maidenes outer edge of the arm so as to protect the elbow. During
who holds that many of the phenomena con- in And the chirches vpon theire knees and elbouxt, that god the sixteenth century such gauntlets of steel superseded
nected with the air-pumj> are to bo explained sholde hem spede and defende fro deth. the vanibrace, and gloves of leather and quilted silk an-
by the elasticity of the air, and who maintains JTerftn (E. E. T. S.), II. 246. swering the same purpose were worn far into the seven-
toenth cfiitiiry,
the truth of Boyle's law that the density of a gas The wings that waft oiur riches out of sight
is proportional to the pressure. Grow on the gamester's elbows. elbow-grease (el'bo-gres), n. colloquial or A
Cowper, Task, ill. 761. humorous expression for energetic hand-labor,
Although our antbour (Linnil confeaaes that air has a There leaning deep in broider'd down we sank as in rubbing, scouring, etc.
spring as well aa a weight, yet he resolutely denies that Dor elbowt. Tennyiton, Princess, iv.
spring to be near great enough to perform those tblnn He has scartit and dintit my gude mahogany past a' the
which hia adveisariea (whom for breTlljr sake we wul 2. In aiuif., the elbow-joint and associate struc- power o' bees.wax and elbow-grease to smooth.
venture to call tIaUritIt} ascribe to It. tures. See elbow-joint. —
3. Something curved
BoyU, Defence agalnat LIniu, II. or bent like the human elbow; specifically,
Gait, The Entail, III. 84,
gathered a little before it ripens, and the juice dependently revolves in the lesser sigmoid cavity of the
Burly, and big, and studious of his ease.
gently expressed, deposits a green sediment, Coirper, Task, I. 60. ulna, pivoted upon the cajiitellum of the humerus, in the
which is collected and dried. Oixxl elaterium oper- movements of pronation and supination. The term is ex-
ates AS a drastic purge, and Is generally administered In 6. A
shoulder-point in cattle. Grose. [Local, tendeil to the corresponding joint of the arm or fore limb
cases of dropsy. It contains elaterln, together with starch, Eng.]~At one's elbow, uear at hand; convenient; of otlicr nnimiils, whatever its construction may )w.
nain, etc. witnlu call. elbow-piece (el'bo-pes), n. Same as cubitUre,
; :
.
No sooner is he disappointed of that harbour then God Merlin (E. E. T. S.), iii. 472.
25, 26, XX. 28 ; Heb. xiii. 7, 17). The Congregationalists
provides cities of Hebron ; Saul shal die to give him el- The elder shall serve the younger. Gen. xxv. 23. on the one hand, and the Episcopalians on the other, main-
hmo-room. Bp. Hall, Abner and Joab. tain tliat there was no distinction between ruling and
His elder son was in the field. Luke xv. 25.
teaching elders, the elder or presbyter being in their judg-
elbow-scissors (el'bo-siz'orz), n. pi. Scissors After fifteen Months Imprisonment, K. Richard is re- ment identical with the pastor or shepherd of tlie llock
which, for convenience in cutting, have a bend leased, and returns into England four Years elder than lie (Acts XX. 28 1 Thes. v. 12 Heb. xiii. 7, 17 1 Tim. v, 17).
; ; ;
elbow-shield (el'bd-sheld), n. The piece of ar- prestre, into priest. Smith, N. T. Hist., p. 447, note.
elder officer or magistrate.
mor protecting the elbow; a cubitifere. See You wrong me, Brutus,
5. In certain Protestant churches, an officer ex-
cuts under armor (figs. 2 and 3). Hewitt. I said an elder soldier, not a better. ercising governmental functions, either with or
elbow-sleeve (el'bo-slev), «. A sleeve in a Shak., J. C, iv. 3. without teaching or pastoral functions, (a) In
woman's dress, terminating at the elbow. He [Dryden] may very well have preferred Romanism churches of the Baptist persuasion the pastors of churches
elbow-tongs (el'bo-tdngz), «. pi. A pair of because of its elder claim to authority in all matters of are usually called elders, although the class especially so
called are not settled pastors, but evangelists and mis-
heavy tongs with curved jaws. doctrine. Lowell, Among my Books, 1st ser., p. 77.
sionaries. (6) (1) In churches of the Presbyterian order
elbuck (el'buk), n. A Scotch form of elbow. 3. Prior in time; earlier; former. the pastor of a church is technically called the teaching
elcaja (el-ka'ja), n. An Arabian tree, Trichilia In elder times, when merriment was. elder, as distinguished from the ruling elders, commonly
Robin Hood and the Beggar (Child's Ballads, V. 252). called simply elders, who are a body of laymen, varying
emetica, the fruit of which is emetic, and also in number, selected to assist the pastor in the oversight
is sometimes used in the composition of an In the elder days of Art, and government of the church. The board of ruling el-
ointment for the cure of the itch. Builders wrought with greatest care. ders constitute with the pastor the session of the church,
Longfellow, The Builders. and are intrusted with its government and discipline, sub-
Elcesaite, Elkesaite (el-se'-, el-ke'sa-it), n.
The account of this ... is so strongly characterized by ject to the supervision of the Presbyteiy. Such eldei-s are
One of a party or sect among the Jewisli Chris- required to accej)t the Symbol or Confession of P'aith of
the simplicity of elder times . . . that I shall venture to
tians of the second century, deriving their read an extract from the author who relates it. the Presbyterian Church they do not administer the sac-
;
name from Elkasai or Elxai, either their found- Everett, Orations, II. 80. raments, but aid in the Lord's supper by distributing the
er or leader, or the title of the book containing elements. Theyjii-e sometimes elected for life, sometimes
The North Devon coast . . . has the primary merit of only for a term of years. (2) In the early days of Congre-
their doctrines, which they regarded as a spe- being, as yet, virgin soil as to railways. I went accord-
gationalism many churches had, besides the pastor and
cial revelation. ingly from Barnstaple to Ilfracombe on the top of a coach,
Their belief and practices were a teacher, a ruling elder, charged with matters of church
in the fashion of elder days.
mixture of Gnosticism and Judaism, with raudi that was government and discipline.
peculiar. They were finally confounded with the Ebionites. H. James, Jr., Trans. Sketches, p. 36.
The congregation at Watertown (whereof Mr. George
elchi, elchee (el'chi, -che), n. [Turk, and Pers., Elder Brethren, See 6ro(Acr.— Elder Edda. &eeEdda. Phillips was pastor) had chosen one Richard Brown for
< Hind, elchi, an ambassador, envoy.] An arii-
— Elder hand, see hand. their elder. Wiiithrop, Hist. New England, I. 81.
bassador or envoy. Also spelled eltehi. elderl (el'd^r), «. [< (l) ME. pi. eldren, wldren,
I judg it not lawfull for you, being a riding Elder,
wlderen, aldren, ealdren, and (with double pi.) opposed to the Elders that teach & exhorte and labore in
. . .
Weake eld hath left thee nothing wise. bless children an<i to take the lead of all meetings." The
;
Spenser, F. Q., II. iii. 16. 1. One who is older than another or others; elders constitute the Melchizedek priesthood, and include
an elderly person. the apostles, the Seventy, the evangelists or patriarchs,
The weak fantasy of indigent eld. Lamb, Witches. and the high priest. Mormon Catechism, xvii. (e) Among
Time hath reft whate'er my soul enjoy "d, To fructifie also this is honest, the Shakers, four elders, two males and two females (the
And with the ills of Eld mine earlier years alloy'd.
That yonger men obeye unto thaire eldron latter also called elderesses), have charge of each of the
Byron, t'hilde Harold, In gouvernynge, as goode and buxom children. aggregated families.
ii. 98.
Palladius, Husbondrie (E. E. T.
Green boyhood presses there,
S.), p. 6.
elder2 (el'der), n. [(1) < ME. elder, eldre, eldyr
And waning eld, pleading a youthful soul,
At the board, and in private, it very well becometh (with excrescent d), eller, also ellerne, ellarne
Intreats admission. children's innocency to pray, and their elders to say Amen.
Southey.
Hooker, Eccles. Polity.
(whence mod. dial, eller, eldern, ellern, ellen-
8. An age an indefinitely long period of time.
;
He led a blooming bride,
tree), < AS. ellen, the usual form, but earlier
The thridde werldes elde cam (juanne [when] Andstood a wither'd elder at her side. ellaern (in a Kentish gloss) MLG. elhorn,=
Thare begat Abram. Genesis and Exodus, 1. 706. Crabbe, Parish Register. alhorn, alherne, etc., LG. elloorn, elder, the el-
4. Time. The tavern-hours of mighty wits, der-tree. (2) Another form appears in E. dial.
Thine elders and thy betters. hilder, < ME. hilder, hillcr, hillor, hillerne, hel-
This storie olde, . . .
Tennyson, Will Waterproof.
That elde which al can frete and bite derne (generally, like the other ME. forms, in
Hath nygh devoured out of our memorie.
. . .
ashweed, JRitopodium Podagraria. Also called frwnopV law's] wyffe, my wyffes froke and a read petticote. He nothing of . .
lost devotion to the sublime enter-
.
eld'r. (h) 111 the United States, the Aralia hitpida. Wilt 0/1571 (cited in Prompt Parv., ed. Way, p. 138). prise to which he held himself elected from his infancy by
elderberry (el'der-ber'i), n. ; pi. elderberries £1 Dorado (el do-ra'do). [Sp., lit. the gold- the promises of God. Bancroft, Hist. U. S., I. 6.
(-iz). [< W<ter2 + fcerryl.] The purplish-black en: the (< L'. ille, that); dorado, pp. of
el, If Orcagna's work was elected to survive the ravages of
drupaceous fmit of the elder, Sambuctis nigra dorar, gild: see dorado and deaurateT] A time, it is a happy chance that it should be balanced by a
group of performances of such a different temper.
and S. Canadengis, harinf; an acidulous and country rich beyond all precedent in gold and U. James, Jr., Trans. Sketches, p. 322.
sweetish taste, and used for making a kind of
wine. The inspissated juice is employed as an
jewels, which the early Spanish explorers be-
lieved to exist somewhere in the new world,
Hence —
2. To select for an ofBce or employ-
aperient and a diuretic. ment by a majority or plurality (according to
and which Grellana averred that he had found agreement) of votes choose by ballot or any ;
That eiderierriet are poison, as we are tangbt by tradi- in his voyage down the Amazon in 1540-41.
tion, exi>erience will unteach us.
This was soon disproved, but the search was continued similar method as, to elect a representative or
:
and private displeasure can do against a monarch dreamest of Paradises and El Doradot, which are tar from Of his Deghter by dene, that were dere holdyn.
Shak., Hen. V., Iv. 1. thee. Cartyte. One Creusa was eald kyndly by nome.
That Eneas afterward Elit to wed.
If he give not back his crown again upon the report of In Eldorado, we are told, the children in the streets That spokyn is of specially in our spede after.
an elder-gun, I have no augury. play with nuggets of gold instead of marbles. Destruction of Troy (E. E. T. S.), 1. 1491.
Beau, and Ft., Fhllaster, i. 1. Fortnightly See., N. S., XL. 98.
They have been, by the means that they elected, carried
elderly (el'd^r-U), a. [< eWcrl + -Jjl.] Some- eldrich, eldritch (el'drich), a. [Sc., also for- beyond the end that they designed.
Boyle, Essay on Scripture.
what old advanced beyond middle age
; ; bor- merly spelled elriche, elrische, elraige, elrick, aU
dering on old age as, elderly people.
: risch, allerish, airy, elphrish, etc.; origin un- Yourself elected law should take its course.
weird ; pre- Avenge wrong, or show vengeance not your right.
I knew them all as l>ables, and now they re elderly men. certain. ] Hideous ; ghastly ; -wild ; Browning, Ring and Book, I. 149.
Tennyson, The Grandmother. ternatural.
=Syn. Old, etc. See aged. =8yTL Select, Prefer, etc. See choose.
She heard strange elritch sounds
eldemif (el'd^m), [Also eldren; < eWerl
a. + Upon elect (e-lekt'), a. and n. [= F. Hit
that .wind which went. Sp. electo =
-ji.J Elder; elderly; aged. I. 123). Pg." eleito It. eletto, < L. eleetus, pp. : see
The Young TanUane (Child's Ballads, = =
His lengthen'd chin, his tum'd-up snout. elect, V. t.] I. a. 1. Chosen; selected from
Then cot it speaks an eldren knight. . . .
"O liand your tongue, ye eldren mail, His eldritch squeal and gestures. among a number ; taken in preference to others
And bring me not to shame." Bums, Holy Fair. specifically, in theol., chosen as the special ob-
Tam-a-LiM (ChUd's Ballad*, L 200). Elean (e'le-an), a. Same as Eliac. jects of mercy or divine favor ; chosen to eter-
eldem^ (el'dfem), a. [< elder^ +
-n, for -en. Eleatic (el-e-at'ik), a. and «. [< L. Eleaticus, nal life.
Cf. ME. ellem, etc., elder.] Of elder; made of also Eleates, pertaining to Elea, Gr. 'EX/a, L. The elder unto the elect lady and her children, whom I
also Velia and Uelia, orig. called (by its Greek love in the truth. 2 John 1.
elder belonging to the elder.
;
No other dominion than paternity and eU»r$Up. the conception that the One, or Absolute, alone Is real. ernor or mayor elect. 3. Of such a nature as —
Btdeigh, Hist World, L ii. i 1.
n. n. 1. An
inhabitant of Elea. 2. ad- — An to merit choice or preference noble exalted. ; ;
Though Truth and Falsehood are as twins ally'd. herent of the Heatic philosophv. Emerson stood hale and serene and sane,
. . elect and
+
.
There's elderthip on Truth's delightful side. Eleatici8m(el-e-at'i-8izm), ». [<£ka«e -»«»».] beautiful in every aspect of his mind.
Pamell, IXmnes Third Satire VersiBed. LXXVI. 478. Harper's Mag.,
The doctrines of the Eleatic school of philoso-
2. The office of an elder : as, he was elected to phy. H. n. sing, or pi. 1. A person or persons
the eldership. — 3. A body or an order of elders. elec. An abbreviation of electric and electricity, chosen or set apart ; one or more selected for a
No repeated crambes of Christ's discipline, of Elders elecampane (el'e-kam-pan'), ». [Formerly eli- particular service or honor.
and Elaenhipt, ... no engine was capable to buoy up campatte, aleaim'jmne, alycompaine, heliecampa-
Bp. Oauden, Tears of the Church, p. 17.
Behold my servant, whom I uphold mine elect, in whom ;
Presbytery.
nie (the first part, being al- my soul delighteth. Isa. xliL 1.
elder-tree (el'dtr-tre), n. See elder^. tered appar, in simulation These reverend fathers, the elect of the land.. . .
elder-'wine (el'dfer-wln), n. wine made from A of the L. name helenium = Shak., Hen. VIII., ii. 4.
clilcrlMTries. tisually with the addition of some Gr. i>h>iov (> AS. elene)-. < The executive, the elect of the whole State, has in no in-
Kjiirit. OF. enule-campane, < ML. stance any medium of communication with his constitu-
ents, except through the legislature.
eldest (el'dest), a. superl. [< ME. eldest, el- inula campana, elecam- N.A. Rev., CXXIII. 4.
dente, ealdeste, aUlest, < AS. yldesta, superl. of pane: L. inula, elecam-
eoM, old. The form oldest is mod., < old + pane, perhaps an accom. 2. Those who are chosen by God to eternal life.
-est; cf. elder^, a.] Oldest; most advanced in of helenium, < Gr. i/.iviov, a He shall send his angels, . and they . . shall gather to-
hU from the four winds. Mat. xxiv. 31.
age; that was bom
first: as, the eldest son or plant supposed to be ele- gether elect
daughter. campane ; ML. campana, 'Tls true we all hold there Is a number of elect, and many
to be saved. Sir T. Browne, Religio Medici, L 66.
Thenlie (the king of Moab) took hinetdet son that should prob. for campania, fem.of
have reiinieil in his stead, and oReied him for a burnt of- campanius, eampaneus, of As God hath appointed the elect unto glory, so hath He,
fering upon the wall. 2 Kl. lii. '17. Elecampane (/MWa Htle- by the eternal and most free purpose of His will, foreor-
the field, < L. campus, a field MtUfH). dained all the means thereunto.
O, my offence is rank, it smells to heaven
see campaign, champagne.'] West. Con/, of Faith, ill. § 6.
It hath the primal eldstt curse upon 't,
1. The common name of Inula Helenium, a
A brother's murtber '.
Shak., Hamlet, lii. 3.
elect. An abbreviation of electric and electricity.
coarse stout composite plant, a native of cen-
Eldest hand. Sec Hand. electantt (e-lek'tant), n. [< L. elcctan{t-)s, ppr.
eldfathert, n. [< ME. eldfader, eldefader, aid- tral Europe and Asia, sometimes cultivated,
of c/cctor<^, rare freq. of eligere, elect see elect.] :
fader, < AS. ealdfader, aldftrder (= OFries. al- ami often found naturalized in meadows and One having the power of choosing.
dafeder, aldfader), grandfather, < eald, old, + pastures in the eastern United States, it was
one of the most famous of old medicines, having a special You cannot go on further to entitle him a free electant
fader, father : see old (and eld) and fa ther. Cf reputation In all pulmonary affections, and It Is still used too. A. Tucker, Light of Nature, II. ili. 26.
eldmother.} 1. A grandfather. as a domestic remedy for various complaints. (e-lek'ta-ri), n. An obsolete form of
electaryt
The wyt of hire fadlr or of hire eld^adir. Seed-pearl were go<xl now, boiled with syrup of apples, electiiary.
CAatwer, Boethlus, U. prow 4. Tincture of gold, and coral, citron-pills,
2. A father-in-law. Your elieamyane root, myrobalanes. electicism (e-lek'ti-sizm), «. An improper form
B. Jonton, Volpone, ilL 2. of eclecticism. [Rare.]
eldin, n. See eUUitg.
; ; — —
Of your companions, President are chosen for the term of four years, by elec-
B. Jonson, Every Man in his Humour, i. 1. etc.; work
for the success of a candidate or of tors, appointed in such manner as the several States may
—
The freedom of election a freedom which is indispen- a party in an election : as, to electioneer for a direct. Calhoun, Works, I. 176.
sable to all moral value, whether in doing or in suffering, candidate, or for a ticket ; he electioneered with The electors have no practical power over the election,
in believing or denying. De Quincey, Essenes, i great effect. and have had none since their institution.
2. The choice of a person or persons for office He . . . tookcaretoengageinhisinterestall those un- T. H. Benton, Thirty Years, I. 37.
of any kind by the voting of a body of quali- derlings who delight in galloping round the country to Presidential electors, persons elected by the voters of
electioneer. Afiss Edgeworth, Kosanna, iii. the several States for the purpose of electing the next
fied or authorized electors. The persons voted for
President and Vice-President of the United States. Ori-
are called catuiidates, or, with reference to their selection The experiment is now making, . . . whether candidates
for the presidency shall openly electioneer for that office.
ginally they were expected to exercise some independent
as candidates, nominees. Election for public office is now
choice among members of each party represented in their
almost universally effected by the use of printed ballots. B. Choate, Addresses, p. 425,
body ; but in practice their function soon became merely
(See balloti.) The decision may depend ui>on the cast-
ing of an actual majority of all the votes for a caniUdate,
electioneerer (e-lek-8ho-ner'6r), n. One who that of casting votes predetermined by party nomination.
electioneers. Each State has as many electors as it has representatives
as in various European countries and in some of the
and senators in Congress. No person holding an office
United States, or upon a plurality or the largest number Many loud-tongued electioneer e.rs, who proved to Vivian,
of votes for any candidate where there are more than two
under the United States government is eligible for au
by everything but calculation, that he must be returned elector.— The Great Elector, the name usually given to
opposing candidates, as in most of the United States. In if he would but stand. Miss Edgeworth, Vivian, ii. Frederick William, Elector of Brandenbui^ from 1640 to
the former case a new election has to be held when there
electioneering (e-lek-sho-ner'ing), p. a. Of or 1688, who greatly strengthened the Brandenburg- Prussian,
is no actual majority; in the latter a single balloting is
jH) wer, and prepared the way for the elevation of the Prus-
final unless there is a tie, which is very rare. pertaining to the influencing of voters before or sian monarchy under Frederick the Great.
And alweys thei maken here Queen by Eleccioun, that is at an election : as, electioneering practices.
electoral (e-lek'to-ral), a. [= F. Electoral =
most worthy in Armes. Mandeville, Travels, p. 155. elective (e-lek'tiv), a. and n. [= F. Mectif = Sp. electoral ^ Pg. eleitoral = It. elettorale ; <
The election of a Pi'esident of America, some years hence, Pr. electiu =
Sp. Pg. electivo It. elettivo, \ L. = elector + -«/,] Of or pertaining to election or
will be much more interesting to certain nations of Europe as if *electivusj < electuSj pp. of eligere, pick out,
than ever the election of a king of Poland was. electors ; consisting of electors.
Jefferson, Correspondence, II. 275.
choose: ^qq elect.'] I. a, 1. Chosen by election;
Such are the subdivisions in favour of the electoral and
dependent on choice ; bestowed or passing by other princes of the empire. Burke, Economical Reform.
3. The act or process of choosing a person or election: as, an c/cciiVe monarchy (one in which
persons for office by vote a polling for office The restriction of the electoral franchise to the class
;
the king is raised to the throne by election) which was qualified to serve on juries commended itself
also, the occasion or set time and provision for
the office is elective: opposed to hereditary, or to moderate politicians of the fifteenth century.
making such choice as, a general or a special
:
to tenure by appointment. Stubbs, Const. Hist., § 368.
election ; American elections are generally held
The elective mode of obtaining rulers is the characteris- Electoral college, a name infoimally given to the elec-
in autumn. tic policy of republican government. tors of a single State, when met to vote for President and
Election, in a political sense, was formerly limited to A. IJamilton, The Federalist, No. Ivii. Vice-President of the United States, and sometimes to the
*'the act of choosing a person to fill an office or employ- whole body of electors. See presidential electors, under
It came whether the monarchy was he-
to be disputed elector.
ment." The new sense ... is a voting at the polls to reditary or elective. J. Adams, Works, IV. 362.
ratify or reject a proposed measure. In case the electoral college fails to choose a Vice-Presi-
Pro/. F. P. Brewer, in Trans. Amer. Philol. Ass., By its [the House of Lords'] side arose the House of Com- dent, the power devolves on the Senate to make the se-
[XVII., App., p. vii. mons, the elective house of the knights, citizens, and bur- lection from the two candidates having the highest num-
E. A. FreemQLn, Amer. Lects., p. 369.
Hence — 4. By extension, a public vote upon a
gesses.
An elective magistracy and clergy, land for all who would
ber of votes.
Electoral commission, in U.
Calhoun, Works, I. 175.
an extraordinary
proposition submitted ; a poll for the decision till it, and reading and writing, will ye, nill ye.
S. hist.,
commission, consisting of five senators, five representa-
by vote of any public matter or question as, : Lowell, Among my Books, 1st ser., p. 230.
tives, and five associate justices of the Supreme Court of
to hold an election on a new constitution, or on 2. Pertaining or relating to or consisting in the the United States, created by an act of Congress in 1877, to
a measure referred by the legislature to the choice or right of choosing by vote : as, the elec- whom were to be referred all electoral votes for President
people. [U. S.] —
5t, Discernment; discrimi- tive principle in government ; the elective fran-
and Vice-President as to the admission of which the two
houses could not agree, the Republicans having a major-
nation; distinction. chise. ity in the Senate and the Democrats in the House of Rep-
To use men with much difference and election is good. The pope rejected both candidates, declared the
. . .
resentatives. The occasion for the disagreement was the
Bacon. power to be forfeited, and put in his own nominee.
elective
opposite views taken by the respective parties as to the
relative validity of different sets of electoral votes re-
6. In theol. : (a) The choice by God of partic- Stubbs, Const. Hist., § 382.
turned from the lately seceded States of Louisiana, South
ular individuals either (1) to be the recipients The elective right of the chapters and the archiepiscopal Carolina, and Florida, and also from Oregon, which would
confirmation were formally admitted. decide the election. The result was the seating of the
of his grace and of eternal life, or (2) to be
Stubbs, Const. Hist, § 381. Republicans Hayes and Wheeler, as against the Democrats
commissioned for a particular work. Whether Tilden and Hendricks.— Electoral crown, the crown
the choice in the former case is absolute or conditional is 3. Exerting the power of choice.
worn by the electors of the Roman-German empire, repre-
a disputed question in theolot^y. Calvinism maintains All moral goodness consisteth in the elective act of the sented as arched with four half-circles supporting an orb
that it is absolute Arminianism, that it is conditional.
; understanding will. N. Grew, Cosmologia Sacra. and a cross, and doubled or faced with ermine, which
Knowing, brethren beloved, your election of God.
4. Selecting for combination: as, an elective turns up round the lower rim and has a scalloped edge,
1 Thes. i. 4. and with two fillets hanging down on the two sides.
attraction, which is a tendency in bodies to
This election was not founded upon foreseen faith, and Electoral mantle, a mantle worn as a mark of office by
unite with certain kinds of matter in preference the electors of the Roman-German empire.
the obedience of faith, holiness, or any other good quality
or disposition in man, as the prerequisite, cause, or con- —
to other kinds Elective affinity. See chemical af- electoralityt (e-lek-to-ral'i-ti)* «• [< electoral
dition on which it depended but men are chosen to faith
; finity, under cAemicai.— Elective franchise, monarchy,
See the nouns.
+ ~ity.] An electorate.
and to the obedience of faith, holiness, etc. etc.
Understanding as well this declaration to be for the
Canons of
Synod of Port, ix.
the II, n. In the colleges of the United States,
and estates, situate and being
elect oralities, principalities,
I believe election means, secondly, a divine appointment an optional study; any one of a number of within the empire. Beliquice Wottoniance, p. 534.
of some men to eternal happiness. studies from which the scholar is allowed to
But I believe this
election to be conditional,' as well as the reprobation op-
select that which he prefers. electorate (e-lek'tor-at), n. [= F. electorat =
posite thereto. John Wesley, Works, VI. 28.
Post-graduate electives are allowed to a limited extent.
Sp. electorado Pg. eleitorado It. elettorato; = =
(&t) Those who are elected by God to eternal Jour. Pedagogy, I., No. 6, advertising p. 6. as elector -ate^.] 1. The whole body of elec- +
life. tors ; the aggregate of citizens entitled to vote.
electively (e-lek'tiv-li), adv. By choice; with
Israel hath not obtained that which he seeketh for but
preference of one to another.
; Our Liberal electorate has the task thrown upon it not
the election hath obtained it. Rom. xi. 7. only of choosing a good minister, but also of determining
Cabbage is no food for her [the
the good shall be butterfly] ; yet in the what which this minister is to bring us.
7. In astral, f a reason for choosing one time cabbage, not by chance, but studiously and electively, she M. Arnold, in Nineteenth Century, XIX. 654.
rather than another for an undertaking a lays her eggs. ; Paley, Nat. Theol., "xviii.
In the new Parliament, notwithstanding the vast in-
preference of times. See rootj n. electivity (e-lek-tiv'i-ti), n, [< elective + -ity.'] crease of the electorate, there was no direct representation
The assendent sothly, as well In alle nativitez as in ques- The quality of being elective. F. W. H. Myers. of the unions. The Century, XXVIII. 129.
tiouns & elecciouns of tymes, is a thing which that thise
astrologiens gretly observen.
elector (e-lek'tor), n. [= F. 6lecteur = Sp. elector 2. The dignity of an elector in the Roman-Ger-
Chaucer, Astrolabe, ii. § 4.
Electionif hold good In those cases only where both the
= Pg. eleitor = It. elettore, < L. elector^ a chooser, man empire. 3. The territory of an elector in
< eligerCf pp. electuSj pick out, choose see elect.']
—
virtue of the heavenly Iwdies is such as does not quickly Germany. :
pass, and the action of the inferior bodies is such as is not One who elects or has the right of choice a He can himself command, when he pleases, the ;
. . .
auddeoly accomplished. person who has the legal right of voting for whole strength of an electorate in the empire.
Bacon, De Augmentis (tr. by Spedding), ii. 4. any functionary or the adoption of any mea- Addison, Freeholder.
8. In math.^ a part or the whole of a number sure a voter, in free governments the people, or such electoress, electress (e-lek'tor-es, -tres), M.
;
of distinguishable objects. The number of elections of them as possess the prescribed qualifications, are the [= F. Slectrice = It. eleitrice; as elector + -ess.]
of n
things is 2« —
l. Thus, the elections of three things, electors of their legislative representatives, and in some,
The wife or widow of an elector of the Boman-
A, B, C, are : A, B, C, AH. AC, BC. ABC—
Age Of elec- as the United States, of their principal executive oflScers,
Gerraan empire.
tion. See^^^ri— Disseizin by election, sw disseizin. and in some cases of their judicial oflicers.
— Elections (Hours of Poll) Act, an Knt-'lish statute of The rule of Jefferson was followed in requiring no prop- The eyes of all the protestants in the nation turned to-
1884 (47 and 48 V|<;t., c. 34), which established hours for erty qualification for an elector. wards the electoress of Brunswick who was daughter to the
;
voting at parliamentary and municipal elections in cer- Bancroft, Hist. Const, II. 113. queen of Bohemia. Bp. Burnet, Hist Owa Times, an. 1700.
—; , ; ;
electorial (e-lek-ta-ri-al), a. [< elector -toZ.] + needed. Commonly an electromagnet, through which the
current passes, is used for this purpose. As tlie carbons
the same kind a small initial charge must fii-st be com-
municated to the armatui-e. By induction this is in-
Same as electoral. [Rare.] are slowly consumed the distance ijetween them increases creased until a maximum, depending on the insulating
1 make no doubt they [the revoliitinn society) would the current meets with greater resistance, and is weaitened power of the machine and its supporte, is reached. The
soon erect themselves into an electorial college, if things accordingly; this in turn wealiens the electromagnet, electrical energy developed has its equivalent in the work
were ripe to give effect to their claim. which acts less powerfully on its armature, and thus done in overcoming alternate attraction and repulsion of
Burke, Rev. in France. through some mechanical device causes the points to ap- the moving and fixed parts. The effects of an induction-
electorship (e-lek'tor-ship), n. [< elector + proach each other. If they come too near together, tlie
strengthened current strengthens the electromagnet, and
machine are much more powerful than tliose of the plate-
machine, and it is less influenced by dampness in the air.
ship.^ The office of an elector. the same contrivance pulls them apart again so that ; It is consequently a very useful machine in the physical
And the Bavarian hath male-issue of this young lady,
if the current automatically regulates itself. In electric can- laboratory, being much used for statical experiments.
the son is to succeed him in the electorship, dies this necessity is done away with here, as in the Jab-
; When a powerful current of electricity is required, a mag-
HttuxU, Letters, L vL 2a lochkoff candle, for example, the carbon pencils are placed neto-electric or dynamo-electric machine driven by a
side by side, separated by some insulating earthy substance, steam- or gas-engine, or by water-power, is employed.
Electra (e-lek'tra), n. [L., < Gr. 'H/ixTpa, a the arc is formed at tlie These machines depend upon the induction which takes
fern, proper name: see electrum.'] 1. One of A ui top, and the candle burns place between magnets and coils of wire, when their rela-
the Pleiades, 20 Tauri.— 2. [NL.] In zoiil. (a) :
f^. away in a manner analo- tive positions are changed. (See wdwc(ton.) The distinc-
gous to that of an ordi- tion between the magneto- and dynamo-machines is that
A genus of polyps. Lamarck, 1816. (6) A ge- nary candle. With these in the former a permanent magnet is employed, while in
nus of lepidopterous insects. Stephens, 1829. candles alternating car- the latter its place Is taken by an electromagnet. A
(c) A genus of dipterous insects. Loea, 1845. rents are employed to ob- simple form of the first cunsists of a large horseshoe mag-
net, before the poles of which two bobbins wound with
((f) A genus of moUusks.
viate the difficulty that
insulated copper wire and inclosing cores of soft iron are
electret, «• A middle English form of electrum. made to revolve; the variation in magnetic intensity and
electrepeter (e-lek-trep'e-t6r), n. [Incorrect- polarity as these soft iron cores alternately approach and
ly formed, appar. meant for "eleetrotrope, < Gr. recede from the poles of the permanent magnet produces
induced currents in the wire of the bobbins. These cur-
i/MKTpov, amber (repr. electricity), Tpi-reiv, + rents are reversed for each half-revolution, and hence a
turn.] An instrument for changing the direc- machine of this type produces an alternating cuiTent.
tion of electric currents. i
By the use of a commutator, however, the current may be
rectified, so that it passes through the connecting wire
electress, ». See electoress.
always in the same direction. In another form of the
electric (e-lek'trik), a. and ». [= F. Hectrique machine the soft iron core Is in the form of a ring, about
= Sp. electrico Pg. eieetrico =
It. elettrico (ef. = which a numl>er of separated coils of insulated wire are
D. G. elektrisch =
Dan. 8w. elektrisk), < NL. wound, the ends of which are taken to the central axis. Tliis
circular armature revolves between the poles of the horse-
electricus, < L. electrum, amber (repr. electri-
shoe magnet, and the result is the generation of a current in
city): see e/ecfruni. First used by Gilbert, "Vim one direction in one half of the coils, and in the opposite
illam electricam nobis placet appeUare" (De direction in the other half. The current is taken off for
.Magnete (1600), ii. 2, p. 47).] I. a. [Also elec- Arc-lamp. the outside circuit by means of two metallic brushes on
trical.'] 1. Containing electricity, or capable of B, hanger ; C, switch />, resistance
:
each side of the central axis. The magneto- electric ma-
coil £. m^oets ; F, clutch G, car- chine has been displaced for practical use by the dynamo-
exhibiting it when excited by friction as, an
; ;
:
boo rod; //, upper carbon; /, gas- , , ,
Incandescent Lamp,
electric body, such as amber or glass. Boyle, check plug: JtT, inclosing bulb; i.
lower carbon; Af, lower carbon hold-
Atmospheres of Consistent Bodies (1667). er; jV, hook for tail-piece.
2. Pertaining to or consisting in electricity: would othenriBe arise from the more rapid consumption
as, electric power; an electric discharge. 3. — of the carbon forming the positive pole. In an incan-
Derived from or produced b v electricity as, an : descent electric lamp, or glow-lamp, the current i^ made
electric shock; an electric light. 4. Convey- — to pass through a strip of some sulistance which, because
of its higli resistouce, becomes highly heated, and lience
ing electricity; producing electricity; com- brilliantly incandescent Practically, the only suitable
municating a shock by electricity: as, an elec- substance known is carbon, which in the form of a thin strip
tric machine ; electric wires ; the electric eel or or wire, carefully prepared for the purpose (for example,
fish. from a strip of bamboo) and bent in a loop, is inuloaed in
a btUb of glasB from which the air has been exhausted.
CertsiD flihe* belonging to the generm Torpedo (among The vacnnm Is essential to prevent the consumption of
tlieElasmobninchilX Oymnotiu, Malaptemms, and Mor- the carbon at the bigh temperature to which it Ia raised.
myrus (among the Teleostei), pua»e« organs which convert The Incandescent iiglit is comparable in brlliiancy to a
nervous energy into electricity, Just as muscles convert good ffasbumer, and is hence suitable for general house
the same energy into ordinary motion. . . . The nerves of illumination ; It is snperior to gas in steadiness, and has
the electrical organs procee<i from the flftli pair, and from the great advantage that it does not vitiate the air. The
the electric lobe ot the medulla oblongata, which appear* current employed has, tor lamps of ordinary power, much
to be developed at the origin of the pnenmogastrioa. less strength than that needed for the urc-iight. The
liuzUy, Anst Vert., p. M. clutch-lamp Is an arc-lamp in which the rod to which the
8. Operated bv electricity : as, an electric bell upper carbon Is attacheu la stirrounded by an annular
an electric railway. 8. Figuratively, full of— clutch, which Is raided when the circuit is completed,
thus establishing ttie arc — Electric log, a ship's log in
fire, spirit,or passion, and capable of commu- which the recuitling mechanism may be stopped by clos-
nicating it to others; magnetic. ing an electrical circuit through the tow-line when it is
necessary to haul ttie log on t>oard ship. Another form
KleeMc Pindar, quick as fear.
of electric log uses the recording mechanism to close a
With race-dust on his cheeks, and clear
circuit throo^ ttie tow-line, ami rt-p<>rt thi- record of the
Slant startled eyes.
log on the veaseL See Io<7.— Electric machine, a ma-
Jfr<. Browning, Vision of Poeta,
chine for genermting laiye quantities of electricity. Those
Dynamo-electric machine. See dtctrie nuuhint, be- commonly used for prt^ucing statical electricity depend
low.— Electric absorption. See retidual charge, under upon either friction or Induction for their operation. For
rMMuoJ. — Electric action, in organ.bmlding, a mecha- producing current electricity a magneto- electric or dy-
nism in which the omneetl.in between the keyboani namo-electric machine is employed. The frictionul elec-
and the pii>es ii made liy the help of electricity. — Eleo- tric machine osoally consists of a plate or cylinder of
^C alarm, any alarm or signaling device controlled or
operated by a current of electricity. The alarm Is sound-
ed by the cloatug of the electric circuit, which may be
effected by a thermoatat, a door, a sash, or other derioe^
according to the parpoee for which the alarm is used. See
alarm, tktrmotUU, and /bn^alarm Electric annmieUlr
tor, an apparatus by means of which the location of the
point at which an electric circait is made or broken is in- Brush Multi-circuit Dynamo.
diiated. A number of electromagnets are connected, each A,
or
field frame ; B, armature ; C,
field spools; ,^, pole piece ; F,
armature coils; D, magnet-coils
automatic regulator for shifting
with some particular station, room, or point fn>m which a brushes, tnereby maintaining a constant current in the lamp circuit
signal may eome; the opening or closing of the circuit at regardless of the number of lamps in operation; (7, commutator; H,
any of these points operates electroma:.-net to which ue brush-holder /, brushes J, mam circuit switch K. circuit switches
; ; ;
it is Joined, bringing into view a numl>er, letter, or word /., series lamps on multiple circuit.
tween two carbon electrodiss, at first in contact and plate with two open spaces, or "windows," on ojtpoRite the current generated in the armattire charges the field-
afterward 8eparat#>d a short distance, the result being sides of the center, and of a second glass plate which Is niagneta, and is also used for the outside work, the coils
the formation "f the v->ItTiic arc. The light of the arc and revolved very rapidly In front of It. On the other side of of the electromagnets, in other words, forming part of
the glowing eariNmiw.inf 8 han great InteTislty, and electric the movable plate, and opposite the windows, are two the external circuit; in still other forms (called shunt
lamps of this Itind are ext'-iiHlvely used for pnrposes of illil- combs connecting with brass conductors ending in Inrtre df/vamos) a portion only of the current generated in the
miTiation. where a powerfnl liAt (1.200 candle-power or knobs. On one edge of each window Is attached a piece armature Is used to charge the field-magnets, the re-
upward) can t«e efmnmieally employed. In order to keep of paper, called the armature, and a tongue of paper pro- mainder being taken off for the practical outside work.
the cari>on electrodes at a constant distance, so that the jects from It Into the open space toward the revolving Many different forms of the machine are now in use,
light may be uniform, some form of regulator is generally wheeL In the use of the Holtz machine and others of and they have proved an economical and convenient
— ; :
cent, of the mechanical energy used in revolving the arma- by friction this same property to a greater or less extent. trifer, producing amber (bearing electricity) (<
ture into the energy of the electric current. They furnish When electricity is produced by the friction of silk on
glass, that of the glass is called vitreous or positive elec-
L. electrum, amber (repr. electricity), -I- /erre =
the electric current much more economically, as well as
tricity, while that of the silk rubber is called resinous or
E. •hear'^), + -ows.] Bearing or transmitting
more regularly, than a voltaic battery, since the zinc, the electricity. Also clectrophorous.
fuel of the latter, is an expensive and a poor fuel, as com- negative electricitg. When produced by the friction of
pared with the coal used for the engine whicli drives the flannel or silk on sealing-wax, that of the wax is negative, electriflable (e-lek'tri-fi-a-bl), a. [< electrify
—
dynamo. Electric meter, an instrument designed to and that of the flannel or silk rubber is positive. Tills dis-
tinction, which, however, is properly explained as due to
+ -able.'] 1. fapable of receiving eieetricity,
measure the quantity of electricity supplied to consum- or of being charged with it that may be elec-
ers for the production of light or heat, or to be used as a a dilf erence of electrical potential (see potential), extends ;
—
motive power. Electric motor. See electric machine.
—
through the whole subject, by whatever means the elec- trified or become electric. 2. Capable of re- —
— Electric organ. See orjro » Electric pendulum, a tricity is produced. It is found universally true that the and transmitting the electric fluid.
ceiving __^^
form of electroscope consisting of a pith-ball suspended by two kinds of electricity are produced in equal aniountB.
Besides friction, there are other means of exciting elec-
tri n Ka snon), n.
oTor+iHfip!rtinTi7p"lpk»'tri-fi->S's'bon)
eieCirmcapiOn(,e-leK n elec-
L^ eife U
a non-eondnctingthread.- Electric piano. See jnano.—
Electric railway, a railway on wliicli electricity is the mo- tricity, as pressure between two bodies or sudden frac- tnfy + -atlOii.] The act of electritymg, or the
tive power. The wheels of each car may be set in motion ture (by which means sugar becomes faintly luminous state of being charged with electricity. This
by an electric motor to which they are geared, or a motor- when broken in the dark). If a piece of sealing-wax is may be positive (+) or negative (—), according as the body
car may draw one or more cars. There are two distinct broken, the opposite ends will be found to be dissimilar- jg charged with positive or negative electricity— that is,
systems of electric railway. In one the electric motor ly electrified. This is especially true of the fracture of according as its potential is higher or lower than the as-
is actuated by a current of electricity drawn from a sec- cleavable minerals, like mica, calcite, etc. Some crystal- sumed zero. See potential.
ondary or *' storage" battery carried with the car, gener- lized bodies become electrified by change of temperature :
electrffler (e-lek'tri-fi-6r),' n. One who or that
ally underneath the floor in the other the current is con-
; for example, a crystal of tourmalin, on being slightly „,,; A7~,i^A;.;fi„„
wiiicii eiec-uiciBB.
veyed from a dynamo at some point on the line by means warmed, becomes positively electrified at one extremity,
of conductors, which may be supported upon poles or and negatively at the other ; if cooled, the poles are re- electrify (e-lek'tri-fi), V. t. ; pret. and pp. elec-
placed in an underground conduit. Electric storm, — versed, (iieejtyro-electricity.) Forthechiefmeansof obtain- trified, ppr'. electrifying. [< L. electrum, amber
a violent disturbance of the electrical condition of the ing a supply of frietional electricity, see electric machine, (repr. electricity), -I- -ficare, make : see -fy.] 1.
earth, resulting in strong earth-currents through long under electric, and electrophorus. The principal subjects
lines of telegraph, often Interfering with the ordinary considered under the head of statical electricity are the To communicate electricity to ; charge with
working of tlie line. These storms are sometimes wide- distribution of electricity over the surface of a conductor, eieetricity; make electric: as, to electrify s, jax.
spread, and are thought by some physicists to be re- as determined byits shape or the proximity of other eleo-
trified bodies (see density) ; the effect of induction or the
— 2. To cause electricity to pass through ; af-
lated to contemporaneous disturbances of the atmosphere fect by electricity ; give an electric shock to
of the sun. The phrase is also applied to unusually vio-
lent displays of atmospheric electricity. —
Electric-tele-
production of an electrified state in a neutral body by ap-
proaching it to one already electrified, but without con- as, to electrify a limb. 3. To excite suddenly; —
graph cable. See ca6(e.— Electric tension, difference tact the degree of induction, as determined by the nature
;
give a sudden shock to; surprise with some
of electric ijotential often used as equivalent to electro-
:
ofthenoll-conductorordielectric(seeinduc(K>»,cojidiK;tor, sudden and startling effect, of a brilliant or
motive force, (See also battery, cell^ circuit, condenser, dielectric) ; the accumulation of electricity in a condenser,
shocking nature ; startle greatly ; thrill : as,
electricity, fluid, potential, telegram, telephone, tengion, as a Leyden jar (see condenser, and Leyden jar, under
gpark, unit.) jar); the measurement of capacity, potential, quantity, etc. the whole assembly was electrified.
(as with an electrometer); and the phenomena of dis- He (Milton] electrifies the mind. Maeaulay, Milton.
II. n. A
body or substance capable of exbib- charge, as the spark-discharge, which takes place between If the sovereign were now to immure a subject in defl-
iting electricity by means of friction or other- bodies when they are brought near anceof the writ of Habeas Corpus, or to put a conspirator
wise, and of resisting the passage of it from ..,.,_,
oppositely electrified ....
together, the brush-discharge, etc.
, .„-, , .;„•*„„„„
Ihe electricity gen- ^^^ torture, the whole nation would be instantly elec-
one body to another. See electricity — To excite erated by friction and analogous means is in a state ol trifled
high potential (see potential), but the quantity, and there
^_.^,j by k.. ii,„ news.
the .,<>,„. Macaulay, mat Eng.,
\in^n„inti Hist. Kncr . L
i
an electric. See excite. fore the amount of electrical energy, is generally small electrinel (g-lek'trin), a. [< LL. eUctrinus, < Gr.
electrical (e-lek'tri-kal), a. [< electric + -al.'\
it has the power of overcoming great resistances and pro- riHtiTptvoQ, made
of amber or electrum, < fi7.tK-
Same as electric. ducing violent mechanical effects, as seen in the discharge Tfiov, amber, electrum: see electrum.] 1. Be-
We believe that the time has arrived when the scientific
of a Holtz machine, and still more strikingly in the case
of lightning. Frietional electricity has found but few
longing to or made
of amber. 2. Composed —
world no longer loolvs upon electrical phenomena as iso- useful applications in the arts. The eonnnon means of of the alloy called electrum (which see).
lated and separate from the phenomena of heat and light, '
_ _ ^ ......
or chemical reactions. Science, IV. 184.
battery and cell.) Electrical currents may also be ob-
+
"
producing current electricity is the voltaic battery. (See elCCtrine^ (e-lek' trill), n
-i»e^.]
"
a copper wire, and then heating (or cooling) the first electnzation (e-lek-tn-za shon), n. [= F.
It also includes the science and art of the erection and
maintenance of telegraph- and cable-lines, of electric rail- point of union. This is called thermo-electricity, and --7_ _^ •„_.....
electrisation <?,_
=
,7„.j_.-
Sp. electrizacion
; t —_
=
Pg. electriza-
way-signals, and other forms of electric signalhig. Elec- — the pair of metals is called a thermo-electrical couple ; it
is analogous to the voltaic couple, only here the electri-
cSo ; as electrize -ation.] + The act of electri-
tllcal mortar, a small mortar within which a discharge fying. Also spelled electrisation.
is made to take place between two bodies charged with
cal current is obtained at the expense of the heat sup-
contrary electricities. This disruptive discharge causes plied. (See thermo-electricity.) The principal subjects It is not electricity which cures, but Electrizations, a
so violent a disturbance of the air-particles as to expel a considered under the head of current electricity are the process requiring far more technical skill than the unini-
light ball placed in the mouth of the mortar. See Volta's effects of the current in causing chemical decomposition tiated generally believe. Alien, and Neurol., VI. 163.
under (see electrolysis, electrometallurgy), in producing heat /- i i n.^ \ .. j . „„„j- „„,! .„„ .=;»/.
pistol, pistol.
and light through the resistance of the medium, including elCCtriZC (e-lek'tnz), f. J. ; Jiret.
and pp. elec-
electrically (e-lek'tri-kal-i), adv. In the man- the voltaic arc, and in the production of induced currents trizcd, ppr." electrizing. [= D. elektriseren G. =
ner of electricity, or by means of it ; as regards in a coil of wire, under certain conditions, by the action
mea-
elektrisiren =
Dan. elektrisere =
Sw. elektrisera
electricity. of another current or a magnet (see induction)
surement of strength of current (as with a galvanometer
; the
=F. ilectriser =
Sp. Pg. electrizar It. elettriz- =
electricalness (e-lek'tri-kal-nes), n. The state or ampere-meter, which see), of electromotive force (as zare, < NL. *electrizare, electrify, < L. electrum,
or quality of being electrical. [Rare.] with a volt-meter), and of resistance (as with the electric am'ber (repr. electricity).] To electric; make
electrician (e-lek-trish'an), n. [= F. Slectricien; bridge or ohm-meter), etc. The current electricity pro- electrify. Also spelled electrise.
+ l.'One who studies elec- duced by the chemical battery or ordinary dynamo-nia- -i..j._,-„ir (p lek'tri n une One or that
luai, who
wuo m
as electric -ian.'] (e-ieK tn-zei 7ei->
chine differs from the statical electricity of the frietional elCCtnzer ;, n.
tricity, and investigates its properties by ob- or induction machine, in that the difference of potentials which electrifies ; specifically, an apparatus tor
servation and experiments ; one versed in the of the poles, or, in other words, the electromotive force tJjg application of eieetricity for medical pur-
science of electricity. —
2. One engaged in the of the current when the poles are connected, is relatively
small, while the quantity of electricity is relativdy enor-
»,„cpj. Also snelled electriser.
business of making or supplying electric ap- ^^^^-^ (g-lek'tro), «. [Abbreviation of electro-
mousiy large. Correspondingly, ordinary curre
paratus or appliances. tricity has relatively very little power of overcoming a type.] kjo. electrotype.
electricity (e-lek-tris'i-ti), n. [= D. elektriciteit high resistance; no spark is obtained, even from a pow- For these reasons the Act is objectionable in prohibit-
= G. elektricitdt =
li'an. Sw. elektricitet F. = erful battery, when the poles are separated
as a small fraction of an inch ; but the current can do a
by so much ing the importation of stereos and electros.
ileetriciUS =
Sp. electricidad =
Pg. electricidade
large amount of work in producing chemical decompo-
Amer. Publishers' Circular.
= < NL. electricita(t-)s, < electri-
It. elettricita, sition (as in the electrolysis of water), or mechanically, electro-. [NL., etc., electro-, formally repr. Gr.
etis,electric: see electric.] In physics, a name when transformed by an electric motor. Induced cur- ^lenTpo-, combining form of ij^-enrpov, amber,
_._.. ,. .,,„.„
„. those
rents, however, as
K„ an
,„„.., by
produced .„ induction-coil
.„,i„„f,„„ .„ii
denoting the cause of an important class of force and
gjget^m (gge electrum), but practically a eon-
(which see), may have a vei7 high electromotive
phenomena of attraction and repulsion, chem- electrico-, combining form of electri-
consequent power of overcoming resistance.- Animal traction of
ical decomposition, etc., or, collectively, these electricity. See animal.— Conta.ct theory of elec- cus, E. electric: see electric] The combining
phenomena themselves. The true nature of elec- tricity, a theory which assumes that the electromotive form, in many modern compounds, of electric,
tricity Is aa yet not well understood ; but It is probable force of a voltaic cell, and perhaps the electricity produced often representing also electricity. [In the fol-
that it is not, as was formerly assumed, of the nature of by friction, is due to the difference of potential assumed lowing compounds containing electro-, where the second
—
a fluid either a single fluid, as was supposed by Frank- by two dissimilar sulistances when placed in contact. element exists independently in English, or is otherwise
lin, or two fluids (positive and negative), as was supposed Diffusion of electricity. See dt/«)rfon.— Distribution perfectly obvious, and where no parallel forms are cited,
liy .Synimer. The word was first used by Gilbert, the cre- of electricity, see di.itributlon.—mectTosta.iic units no etymology is given.]
ator of the science of electricity, and by him was applied of electricity. Scecicc^ros^iKc— Excitation of elec- „V«n+^",;'K"nii,-"o+T/.7a'ipV//trn Vm liR'tiVI n ("lon-
t.on
triclty. See <raxj«aMon.-Freean.l bound electricity.
electroballlStlC (e-lek tro-oa-iis tiK), a.
to the phenomena of attraction and repulsion as exhibited
when amber (electrum) and some other substances of a ISy a ''free" charge of electricity is gciieially meant one eerned With electricity as used to tletermine
similar character were briskly rubbed. Its meaning has which is borne by an insulated body independently of jjje velocity of a projectile at any part of its
been gradually extended to include a large variety of phe- surrounding obj-ects, while a " bound " charge is one held flight gj ,
^ : an applied tto various instruments
epithet a^i
aiA^fj-v^v^
"'!-">'•
nomena, among which may be named heating, luminous in position by the presence and attraction of a charge of
and magnetic effects, chemical decomposition, etc., toge- the opposite character or sign upon a neighboring body. invented by Nauvez. The projectile passes in suc-
distances between
ther with numerous apparent attractions and repulsions As a matter of fact all charges are " bound," the produc- cession through two or more screens, the
of matter widely differing from those originally noted, tion of a given quantity of one kind of electricity being which are known and, the exact time of passage through
;
bath. The coating is subsequently protected scribe and show in projection the vibratory movements. The decomposition of a chemical compound,
Jour. Franklin Inst., CXXI., Supp., p. 48.
by a varnish. called the electrolyte, into its constituent parts
electrocapillarity (e-lek'tro-kap-i-Iar'i-ti), n. electrodynamic, electrodynamical (e-lek^- by an electric current. Thus, water is decomposed
Certain phenomena collectively occurring at tro-di-nam'ik, -i-kal), a. Pertaining to electro- by electrolysis into hydrogen and oxygen of these it is ;
EUctro-dynamometrical measurements.
placed before it, and all those which are electronegative Electrical Rev., XXII. 158. electrolytic, electrolsrtical (e-lek-tro-lit'ik,
aft^-r it. Sec fUrtrotiffiji.
-i-kal), a. [= F. clectrolytique ; as electrolyte
electrochemically (f-lek-tro-kem'i-hal-i), adv. electro-engraving (e-lek'tro-en-gra'ving), n. + -ic, -ical.] Pertaining to or of the nature
.Veicirding to the laws of electrochemistry. An etching process in which the plate, covered
of electrolysis.
electrochemist (e-lck-tro-kem'ist), n. One with a ground and properly etcned, is placed It is not improbable that the increased electrolytic pow-
who praeti.ses electrochemistry. in an electrobath to deepen the "bite" or cut-
er of water by the addition of some acids, such as the sul-
ting-in of the lines. phuric and phosphoric, where the acids themselves are
It [electroraeUllurgyl is a subject of Intense Interest
to the chemist and to the electrician, for It combines electro-ergometer (e-lek'tr6-*r-gom'e-t6r), n. not decompose<i, depends upon a catalytic effect of these
principles underlying Its practice which belong to both See cri/diiit'lrr. acids. W. R. Grove, Corr. of Forces, p. 169.
professions. In fact, the man skilled in its science and electrogenesis (e-lek-tro-jen'e-sis), n. Causa-
Electrolytic cell See cell.
art may apmopriately be styled an eltdn-ehemitt.
tion or j)r()ducti6n by electricity.
Jour. FranUin Int., CXIX. 81. electrolytically (f-lek-tro-lit'i-kal-i), adv. In
electrogenetic (e-lek'tro-je-net'ik), o. Of or an electrolytic manner ; by means of electroly-
electrochemlfltry (e-lek-tro-kem'is-tri), n. iii-rfaininir to electrogenesis. sis ; as in electrolysis.
Chemistry as concerned with electricity; the
ectrogild (e-lek'tro-gild), ». f. ; pret. and pp. The fibre is carbonized in moulds of nickel, and is at-
science w'hich treats of the agency of electricity eUrtrnyilded, electrngilt, ppr. clectrogilding. To tached to the conducting wires by capper, electrolytically
in effecting chemical changes. It ia generally dl- gild, by means of the voltaic battery, with a thin deposited upon them. G. li. Prescott, Dynani. Elect., p. 283.
Tide<i into titetnlytu, or the separation of a compound
body into It* deposit of gold precipitated from a bath of a electrolyzability (e-lek-tro-li-za-bil'j-ti), n.
ooostltaent parts by the passage of an elec-
tric current, and eUetrtnMtaUurgy, or the application of salt of the metal, The capability of being decomposed by an elec-
t-l.-.-lroIysi^ to tile arts. electrogilder (e-lek-tro-gil'dfer), n. One who tric current. Also spelled electrolysability.
.See eUctroijftxM.
electrochronograph (Wek-tro-kron'o-grif), n. Jiractises clectrogilding. [= F.
A chronograph on which the record is made by ectrograph (o-lek'tro-grif), n. [< Qr. ^^cicrpoti, electrolyzable
(e-lek'tro-li-za-bl), a.
ilectrolysablc ; a,8 electrolyse -f -able.] Suscep-
electrical means: much used in astronomical amber (repr. electricity: see electric, electro-), tible of decomposition by an electric current.
observatories and in the laboratory for noting + )p<i(^iv, write.] 1. A
curve automatically Also spelled electrolysable.
the precise instant or duration of transits and traced and forming a continuous record of the electrolyzation(e-lek''tro-li-za'shon),». [=F.
similar phenomena. See chronograph. indications of an electrometer. —
2. An appa- 6lectrnly.sulion ; a,s electrolyse + -atiott.j The act
electrocnronographic (o-lek'tro-kron-o-graf'- ratus for engraving the copper cylinders used of electrolyzing. Also spelled electrolysation.
ik), ((. I'lrtainin)^ to an electrochronograph, in printing fabrics and wall-papers. The cylinder
electrolyze (f-lek'-
or indicateil and recorded by means of it. is first coated with varnish, which is seratche^l hy dia- tro-liz), V. t. pret.
electrocopper (e-lek-tro-kop'fer), V. t. To mond-points traversing upon it, and contrfdled by circuit-
;
erally to the two ends of an open electric cir- motion. A magnet which owes
cuit. The positive pole is termed the anode, electrokinetics (e-lek'tro-ki-net'iks), n. That its magnetic proper-
and the negative pole the cathode. branch of electricity which treats of electric ties to the inductive
electrodeposit (^ek'tro-de-poz'it), n. That currents, or the flow of electricity. action of an electric
which has been deposited'by means of elec- electrolier (f-lek-tro-ler'), n. [Modem, formed current. If an insulated
tricity. in imitation of chandelier.] A
bracket, pen- wire ia wound about a bar Electraasgnet.
; :
ductor an electric current. The directive power of an proportional to the electromotive force, and inversely the premaxillaries forming most of the upper border of
electric current upon a magnet was discovered by Oer- proportional to the resistance (Ohm's law). The elec- the mouth, and the supramaxillaries being reduced and ;
required metal, as copper sulphate, the positive pole at disk is touched by the finger, the
the same time consisting of a plate of the same metal.
Any arrangement which gives rise to an elec-
negative electricity passes to the Volta's Electrophorus.
tric current, as a single cell, a voltaic battery, ground, leaving the disk charged
The result of the electrolysis (see electrolysis) caused by
the passage of the current is the decomposition of the so- or a thermo-electric pile. —
2. An. engine in positively. On being lifted away by its insulating handle,
it is found to be charged, and will give a spark. It may
lution, the metal being deposited upon the exposed sur- which electricity is employed to produce me-
face at the negative pole, and sulphuric acid being formed then be replaced on the lower plate, and the process re-
chanical effects. See electric machine, under peated an indefinite number of times without any fresh
at the positive pole ; the acid, however, dissolves a part
of the copperplate, and thus keeps the solution of con- electric, and motor. excitation, if the weather is favorable. The electricity
stant strength. A current of uniform strength is neces- electromuscular (e-lek-tro-mus'ku-lar), a. obtained each time is the equivalent of the mechanical
sary. Iron and nickel are deposited from solutions of Pertaining to the relations between electricity work done in separating the two surfaces against the at-
their double salts with ammonium; gold and silver, from traction of the unlike electricities.
and certain phenomena exhibited by muscles.
alkaline solutions containing potassium cyanide. 2, leap.] [NL.] The typical genus of Elec-
electrometer (e-lek-trom'e-t6r), n, [= D. G. electron
(e-lek'tron), n. Same as electrum.
trophoridce. There is but one species, the elec-
(e-lek-tro-neg'a-tiv), a. and n.
Dan. Sw. elektrometer = P. ilectromHre = Sp. electronegative
tric eel, E. electricus. Gill, 1864. See cut un-
a. 1. Repelled by bodies negatively electri-
electrdmetro = Pg. electrometro = It. elettrometro, I,
der eel.
fied, and attracted by those positively electri-
< Crr. TjleKTpoVj amber (repr. electricity), + //£-
having a tendency to pass to the positive electrophotometer
(e-lek-^tro-fo-tom'e-t^r), w.
Tpov, a measure.] An instrument for meastir- fied An instrument for comparing the intensities of
—
;
electroplate (f-lek'tro-plat), v. t. ; pret. and cited and stand apart, thus giving a test for electricity. ing,by drawing the lines on a metal plate with
To plate The gold-leaf electroscope of Bennet, introduced in 1789, some varnish which resists the action of acids,
pp. electroplated, ppr. electroplating. consists of two pieces of gold-leaf, about i inch broad, fixed
or give a coating of silver or other metal to by- to a brass rod and hung inside a glass globe which has and placing it in an electrobath, when the ex-
posed portions are bitten in, leaving the pro-
means of electrolysis. See electrometallurgy. been thoroughly dried, in order that the insulation of the
To eUctroplate is to disguise with an adlierent thin coat- ...-.-.
apparatus may be as nearly perfect as possible. The globe
is closed with a wooden stopper through the center of
'
tected parts in relief.
[< Gr. filiKTpov,
ing oJ metal, which then serves as an ornamental cover- which passes^glass tube coutammg the brass rod. The
electrotome (e-lek'tro-tom), «.
ing to the object treated. To electrotype, on the other ^'^^l'^^"^^^^^) electricity), +
To^^^i, cutting, verl
hand is to produce a separate and distinct object, with an bal adj. of rc/ivctv, ra/iriv, out.] An automatic
existence of its own. J. W. Urquhart, Electrotyping, p. 4. circuit-breaker. Greer, Diet, of Elect., p. 54.
electroplate (f-lek'tro-plat), n. Articles coated electrotonic (e-lek-tro-ton'ik), a. 1. Of or
with silver or other metal by the process of pertaining to electrical tension: applied by
electroplating. Faraday to what at one time he erroneously^
electroplater (e-lek'tro-pla-ter), ». One who believed to be a peculiar latent state or condi-
practises electroplating. tion of a conductor near another conductor
electroplating (e-lek'tro-pla-ting), n. 1. The through which an electric ctirrent was flow-
process or art of coating metals and other ma- ing. —
2. Of, pertaining to, or produced by eleo-
terials with an adherent dim of metal, in a bath trotonus.
containing a solution of the metal, by means electrotonicity (e-lek-'tro-to-nis'i-ti), n. [<
of the electrolytic action of an electric current electrotonic + -ity.] Same as electroionus.
from a battery or dynamo, in simple forms of elec- electrotonize (e-lek-trot'o-nl*), v. t. ;
pret. and
troplating apparatus, the bath containing the metallic
solution may form the battery, as in plating with copper.
pp. eleetrotonized, ppr. electrotonizing. [< elec-
The more common plan is to employ a current obtained trotonic + -izc.'\ To alter the normal electric
from some source outside the bath. Table-cutlery or current of, as a nerve. See eleetrotoniis.
-ware, building- or car-flxtures, lamps, etc., to be electro-- Pith-ball Electroscope. Qaadrant Electroscope. electrotonOUS (e-lek-trot'6-nus), a, 1. Of or
plated, are suspended by wires from a metal rod laid
pertaining to electrical t4nsion.- 2. Of, per-
across the top of the bath and connected with the nega- upper end of the rod is furnished with a knob. Ifanelec
tive pole of the battery, this terminal of the current form- trlfled body U brought near the top of the instrument, in- taimng to, or produced by electrotonus.
ing the cathode. The silver, nickel, copper, etc., to be de- duction takes place the top becomes electrified opp<:>sitely electlOtOIlUS (e-lek-trot'o-nus), n.
; [< Gr. fp.eK-
suspended in like manner from a rod connected
positee! is to the body presented, and the pieces of gold-leaf similarly.
,f.pov, amber(repr. electricity), + Tiivof, tension
with the poeitlve pole of the battery, the terminal form- To find If the latter are positively or negatively charged,
ing the anode. (See eUctrolytU, etectTometallnrgy.) The a glass rod is rubbed and brought near the knob if posi- ;
see tone.] The altered state of a nerve or a
deposition of metals by electrolysis forms a part of several tively charged, the leaves will diverge still more under the muscle during the passage of a galvanic cur-
arts, as In electrotyping ; but as In these the film of metal induction of the glass ; if negatively, they will collapse, rent through it. The irritability is heightened in the
deposited in the bath is not adherent, they are described
the negative electricity being attracted to the positive of neighborhood of the cathode and diminisiied in that of the
under separata heads. Electroplating Is strictly the cov-
the glass rod. In Volta's condensing electroscope, in place an<xle. The currents of rest in the nerve are increased or
ering of a metal with a metallic film permanently attache>I
of the gilt knob there is a flat metal plate upon which diminished according as they run in the same or an oppo-
toll, as in nickel-plating, plating telegraph-wires with cop-
rests another similar plate, which may be removed by an site direction to that of the galvanic cuirent. Also eiec-
per, and uble-ware with silver. See Oectntmt, galvano- Insulating handle.— Quadrant electroscope, a form of trotoiios, electrotonicity.
piastie, galtanoglyph, tjaleannyraph^ and nickel-plating. pith-ball electroscope which serves to measure roughly
2. The deposit itself, or the surface, obtained the degree of electrification by the rise of the pith-ball as electrotype (e-lek'tro-tip), ». [= F. Electrotype;
by meani! of the process explained above Indicated by the motion of the rod carrying it on a gradu- < Gr. ;/;t£»:rpoi',' amber (repr. electricity), tvito^, +
ated semicircle. figure, image : see tyjie.} A
copy in metal (pre-
electropoion (e-lek-tro-poi on), n. [< Gr. v?.f-<- eiectroscopic (e-lek-tro-skop'ik), a. Oforper- cipitated by galvanic or electric action, usually
T^u. amber (repr. electricity ), 7ro,u.;, pp. of+ "'^(j J ^^^g- electroscope; performed by in the form of a thin sheet) of any engraved or
™»,., make.] A
"uxture of sulphunc acid,
^^^ns of the electroscope, molded surface. Copies of medals, jewelry, and silver-
bichromate of potash, and water, used as the electrosemapliore (e-let-tro-sem'a-for), n. A ware, of woodcuts and pages of composed type, are com-
iKimd for batteries
li<i m
which zinc and carbon ^,'f,';''™^ro operated 'by electricity" mon f ormsof electrotypes. The metal most used is copper,
are the poles. and the largest application of the process is to the prepa-
electrostatic, electrostatical (e-lek-tr9-stat' ration of plates for printing. The form of composed type
electropolar (e-lek-tr6-p6'l|r), a. Having, as ik, -i-kal), a. Pertaining to statical electricity. is molded in wax, which is dusted or coated with black-
an elect rical conductor, one end or surface posi- — HectiroBtatlc units of electricity, those uniu which lead In order to make it a conductor. The wax mold is
tive and the other negative. are based upon tlie force exerteii between two quantities suspended in a galvanic bath of sulphate of copper, through
of staliciil ein tricity, as units of quantity, potential, etc. which a current of electricity is passed. The thin shell of
electropositive (e-lek-tro-poz'i-tiv), o. and n.
electrostatics (e-lek-tro-stat'iks), n. The sci- copper which attaches to the mold is afterward backed
I. a. 1. Attracted by botiies negatively elec- with stereotypc-nietal. Also etectroglereotype, and com-
trified, or by the negative pole of a voltaic bat-
ence whi<^h treats of ihe phenomena of stati-
monly abbreviated ftectro.
—
2. Assuming positive potential when
cal electricity (see electricity), as the mutual
tery. (e-lek'tro-tip), v. t. ; pret. and pp.
attractions or repulsions of electrified bodies, electrotype
in "contact with anoUier substance, as zinc in electrotyped, ppr. electrotyping. [= F. ilectro-
the measurement and distribution of charges
a voltaic cell. typer; from the noun.] To make a plate copy
A body which in
electrolysis appears of electricity, etc.
n. ». or plate copies of by electrical deposition.
at the negative pole of a voltaic battery. Po- That branch of electrical science which treats of the
prSSrtiM-orslmpieVlectrifled bodies is called eUctrl electrotypcr (f-lek'tro-ti-p^r), «. 1. One who
tassium is the most electropositive of all known tialicf, because In them the electricity U supposed to be makes electrotypes. 2. The vat in which the
bodies. See electrolysis. at rest. J. H. H. Oonion, Elect, and Mag., I. 28. electrotyping solution is held. [Eng.]
electropuncttiration, electropimctnre (e-
electrosteeling (e-lek-tro-ste'ling), «. The electrotypic (e-lek-tio-tip'ik), a. Pertaining
lek tro-puiigtc-tu-ni'shon, c-lek-tro-pungk'tur). art of electroplating with iron the copperplates to or effected by means of electrotyping.
Same aw eleclropuncturing. used in engraving. See electroplating. electrotyping (e-lek'tro-ti-ping), n. The art
electroponctaring (f-lek-tro-pungk'tflr-ing), electrostereotype (e-lek-tro-ster'e-o-tip), n. or process of making electrotypes. Also called
In med., the operation of inserting two or Same as electrotype. galvanoplastio jyrocess.
more needles in a electrotechnic, electrotechnlcal (e-lek-tro electrotjrpist (e-lok'tro-ti-pist), ». [< electro-
part affected and tek'nik, -ni-kal), a. Of or pertaining to elec type + -ist.'] One who practises electrotypy.
then connecting trotechnics. electrotypy (e-lek'tro-ti-pi), n. [= F. ilectro-
them with the electrotechnics (e-lek-tro-tek'niks), n. The typie ; aa electrotype -^- -y.i The process of elec-
wires from the methods, processes, and operations made use trotyping. Also called galvanoplasty.
poles of a gal- of in the application of electricity to the arts. electrovection (f-lek-tro-vek'shon), n. [< L.
viiiiic battery. electrotherapentlc (e-lek'tro-ther-a-pu'tik), a. clcctrum, amber (repr. electricity), -I- vectio(ti-),
electropyrome- Of or pertaining to electrotherapeutics. a carrying, < vehere, pp. tectus, carry : see con-
'-
ter (e-lck'tro- electrotherapeutics (e - lek ' tro - ther - a -pu vection, etc., vehicle.] Same as electrical endos-
pi-rom'e-tir), n. tiks), n. The treatment of disease by means mosis (which see, under cndosmosis).
See pyrornitir, of electricity ; the principles and doctrines of electrovital (e-lek-tro-vi'tal), a. Electrical
lectrbscope (e- such treatment as a branch of medicine ; elec- and dependent upon vital processes.
lek'tro-skop), n.
\ tropathy. (e-lek'trum), n. [Also electron;
electmm F. =
l[= i>. elektro- electrotnerapeutist (e-lek'tro-ther-a-pu'tist), Plectrum =
Sp. Pg. electro It. elettro, < L. =
tteoop = G. Dan. «. One who studies or practises electrothera- electrum, amber (called in pure L. succinum),
f
Bw. elektroskop = peutics. also the metallic compound so called, < Gr.
I F. (lectroscope = electrotherapy (e-lek-trp-ther'a-pi), n. Same f/)icKTpov, or ij^ia-pof, amber, also an alloy of gold
I Bp. elecirdscopo as electrritherapeuticg. and silver, akin to ijliKTup, the beaming sun,
Pg. etectro- electrothennancy (e-lek-tro-thfer'man-si), n. also fire as an element; to 'U^Krpa, a fem.
tteopio =
It. elet- [< Gr. i/?j:KTpiJV, amber (repr. electricity), + Bcp- name ; and prob. to Skt. arka, the sun, arcing,
l^vteopio, < NL. /Mvaic,a heating, < depfiaivciv, heat, < Sepjidi, hot.] flame, ^/ arch, beam, shine.] A word used by
*«lectroieopium, < That branch of electrical science which inves- Greek (JilenTpov) and Latin (electrum) authors
[Or. i^KTpoD, am- tigates the effects produced by the electric cur- with various meanings at various times. From
[ber (repr. eleo- rent upon the temperature of a conductor or the time of Herodotus on its most common meaning in
+ Greek was amber,' but it was also used for pure gold,' as
' '
jtrioity), OKO-
Coad«Mla( BIcctnMCope. part of a circuit composed of two different by Sophocles. The Komans used electrum with the mean-
imt'iv, view.] An metals. ing of 'amber,' also as designating an alloy, which might be
i instrument for observing or detecting the ex- electrothermotic (e-lek'tr6-th6r-mot'ik), a. either natural or artificial, of silver and gold (Pliny gives
istence of free electricity, and, in general, for Of or relating to heat generated by electricity, the amount of silver present in electrum at one fifth of
_
the whole). Later on, electrum was confounded with ort-
.
determining its kind. All electroscopes depend for electrotin (e-lek'tro-tin), v. t. pret. and pp. ;
chalc (which see), ami in the middle ages had acquired
their action on the elementary law of electric forces, that
.leetrotimied. ppr. electrotinning. To electro- the definite meaning of brass." At all times, and especial-
'
= It. lattitario, lattomro, > G. laticerge Dan. = clumsy drollery of his correspondent, Mason.
Lowell, New Princeton Rev., I, 167.
Dr. Warren preached before the Princesse ... of the
Idessednesse of the pure in heart, most elegantly describ-
latvterge = Sw. latverg), < LL. eJectuarium, also ing the blisse of the beatifical vision.
electariiim, (in simulation of L. c?cc-
an aceom. 2. That which pleases by its nicety, symmetry, Evelyn, Diary, Oct. 24, 1686.
his, picked out ; of. ML. elcctuarium, the 61ite purity, or beauty ; an elegancy : as, the elegances
(e-le'ji-ak or el-e-ji'ak), a. and n. [For-
of a troop of soldiers) of "eclictarium (with L. of polite society. = Syn. 1. Grace, beauty, polish. See elegiac
suffix -arium), < Gr. iicKeiKriv (with equiv. iicAfi-
comparison under elegant. merly ctegriacfc; F. iligiaque =
Sp. elegiaco = =
r/io, > Ii. edigma : see eclegin), an electuary, <
elegancy (el'f-gan-si), n. ; pi. elegancies (-siz). Pg. It. elegiaco, < LL. elegiacus, < Gr. ileyeiaKdc,
1. The quality of being elegant; elegance. < i'ksyda, eleyelov, an elegy: see elegy.] I, a.
iKXfi;tS(v, Uek up, < U, out, +
A£i';i;Etv, lick : see
[Rare.] 1. In anc. pros., an epithet noting a dSstich the
Uck.'i la phar., a medicine composed of pow- first line of which is a dactylic hexameter and
ders or other ingredients, incorporated with Let there be two delicate or rich cabinets, daintily
paved, richly hanged, glazed with crystalline glass, and a the second a pentameter, or verse differing from
some conserve, honey, or syrup, originally made rich cupola in the midst, and all other elega^icy that may the hexameter by suppression of the arsis or
in a form to be licked by the patient. be thought upon. Bacon, Building (ed. 1887). metrically unaccented part of the third and the
"How do you do, my honest friend?" . . . "Very weak- 2. That which imparts elegance; an elegant sixth foot, thus
ly, air, since I took the elastuary," answered the patient. -£ ^ ^
Scottj Abbot, xxvi. characteristic or quality. .^^ w I I
Warburton, Doctrine of Grace, i. 8. meter, elegiac verse or poetrg {the elegy) antl the writers ;
The beautiful wildness of nature, without the nicer ele- who employed this verse, especially those who employed
Spectator, No. 477. it exclusively or by preference, are known as the elegiac
ganeies of art.
foets. Elegiac verse seems to have been used primarily
elegant (el'f-gant), a. [= D. G. Dan. Sw. ele- m threnetic pieces Qjoems lamenting or commemorating
gant, < OF.' elegant, F. Elegant =
Sp. Pg. It. tlie dead), or to have been associated with nmsic of a kind
regarded by the Greeks as mournful. Almost from its
elegante, < L. elegan{t-)s, sometimes spelled
first appearance in literature, however, it is found used
eUgan(t-)s, of persons, luxurious, fastidious, for compositions of various kinds. The pi-incipal Koman
choice, dainty, fine, tasteful, elegant of things, ; elegiac poets are Catullus, Tibullus, Propertius, and Ovid.
choice, neat, fine, elegant in form ppr. of an
;
In modern German literature the elegiac meter has been
EUdtme vtrrvcosa. frequently used, especially by Goethe and Schiller. Cole-
unused verb *elegare, prob. equiv. to eligere, ridge's translation from the latter poet may serve as an
ppr. eligen(t-)s, choose, pick out: see elect, eligi- example in English,
cephalopods, typical of the family Eledonidm.
ble.'] 1. Having good or fine taste; nice in in the hex amStfir risgs the fountain's silvgrj
E. verrucosa and E. cirrhosa are examples. I
| | | 1
c61-
taste; fastidious; sensible to beauty or pro-
eledonld (e-led'o-nid), n. A
cephalopod of the
priety ; discriminating beauty from deformity
timn,
In the pen I
tameter aye H falling In melody back.
[ 1 |
classes —
it never made them grateful it is not in human
;
his days and nights to the volumes of Addison.
Johnson, Addison. such distiehs: as, the Heroides and Tristia of
nature that it should. Charlotte Bronte, Shirley, xvi. Ovid are written in elegiacs. See I.
He entered the Church early, but devoted himself to the
The beds of patients (in the hospital at Beaune] are study of canon law and of elegant literature. elegiacal (el-e-ji'a-kal), a. [< elegiac + -al.]
draped in curtains of dark red cloth, the traditional uni- Ticknor, Span. Lit., I. 414. Same as elegiac.
form of these eleetnosynary couches.
U. James, Jr., Little Tour, p. 251. 5. Pleasing to the eye by grace of form or deli- He was the author of a very large number of volumes
of
lyrical, elegiacal and romantic verse.
2. Relating to charitable donations; intend-
cacy of color ; characterized by exquisiteness The American, VIII. 251.
of design or fine taste ; free from coarseness,
ed for the distribution of alms, or for the use
blemish, or other defect; refined : as, an elegant elegiambi, n. Plural of elegianibus.
and management of donations and bequests, elegiambic (el"e-ji-am'bik), a. and n. [< Gr.
figure ; an elegant vase ; an elegant structure.
whether for the subsistence of the poor or for iXtyelov, the meter of the elegy, ta/ijiiKo^, iam- +
the conferring of any gratuitous benefit. 6. Pleasing to the mind, as ejdiibiting fine per-
ception of what is required ; calculated to ef- bic: Bee elegy and iambic] 1. a. Consisting of
elegiac pentameter followed by an iam-
The eleemogyiiary sort [of corporations] are such as are fect its purpose with exceeding accuracj', deli- half an
constituted for the perpetual distribution of the free alms, dimeter; being or constituting an elegiam-
or bounty, of the founder of them to such persons as he cacy, and neatness; exquisitely ingenious or bic
has directed. Blackstone, Cora., I. xviii. appropriate: as, an elegant modification of a bus (which see): as, an elegiambic verse.
Eleemosynary corporations are for the management of philosophical instrument; an e/e^rajii algebra- II. n. A
verse consisting of a dactylic pen-
private property according to the will of the donors. ical formula or mathematical demonstration; themim followed by an iambic dimeter; an ele-
D. Webster, Speech, March 10, 1818. an elegant chess problem. giambus (which see).
3. Dependent upon charity; receiving charita- An elegant sufficiency, content, elegiambus (eFe-ji-am'bus), n. ; pi. elegiambi
Ketii'ement, rural quiet. (-bi). [LL. (Marius Victorinus, Ars Gramm.,
ble aid or support : as, the eleemosynary poor.
Thomson, Spring, L 1158. iv.), < L. elegia, elegy, -I- iambus, iambus.] A
In the accounts of Maxtoke priory, near Coventry, in =Syil. Elegant, Graceful, tasteful, courtly. Elegant im- compound verse, consisting of a dactylic pen-
the year 1430, it appears that the eleemosynary boys, or plies that anything of an artificial character to which it
choristers, of that monastery acted a play.
themim (group of two dactyls and the thesis or
is applied is the result of training and cultivation through
T. Warton, Hist. Eng. Poetry, II. 890. long syllable of a third) and an iambic dimeter,
the study of models or ideals of grace graceful implies
;
elegance, F. iUgance = Sp. Pg. elegancia = It. Montgomery, The Myrtle. + ypacjietv, write.] writer of elegies, or of A
eleganza, < L. elegantia, elegance, < elegan{t-)s, elegantemente (a-la-gan-te-men'te), adv. [It., poems in elegiac verse. [Rare.]
elegant: see efegrawt.] 1. The state or quality elegantly, < elegante, elegant, +
-mente, an adv. Elegiographer, one who writes mournful songs.
* Cockeram,
of being elegant ; beauty resulting from perfect suffix, orig. abl. of L. men(t-)s, mind, with pre-
propriety or from exact fitness, symmetry, or ceding adj. in agreement.] With elegance ; in elegions (e-le'ji-us), a. [< Gr. e?ryeto(, ele^ac,
the like ; refinement of manner, quality, or ap- a graceful and pleasing style a direction in < e'M:yeia, elegy.] Elegiac; hence, lamenting;
:
eleglous element
If four elegicna breath should hap to rouse anything is compounded, which exists
in part weights. (Seeperiodiclaw, under periodic.) Tlie following
Is a list of the elements with symbols and atomic weights.
A happy tear, close harb'ring in his eye,
in it, and which is itself not decomposable into
Then urge his plighted faith.
Qxiarles, Emblems, v. 1.
parts of different kinds a fundamental or ulti-
;
Elements.
mate part or principle hence, in general, any
elegist (el'e-jist), n. [< elegy + -i**.] A writer ;
vocal or instniraental, whether actually com- Be free, and fare thou well Shak., Tempest, v. 1.
!
element (el'S-ment), ». ME. element, < OF. K eaith, and air. (See 2.) I'heolderchemists, of the fifteenth
—
eliiiiinl,F. element 8p. Pg. It. clemento= D. = century and later, recognized three elements sulphur,
mercury, and salt. In modern chemistry an element, or
G. Dan. Sw. element, < L. elementum, a first prin- elementary Ixhly, is regarded merely as a simple substance
ciple, element, rudiment, pi. first principles, which has hitherto resisted analysis by any known chemi-
the elements (of existing things), the elements cal means. The list of such elements is a provisional one,
of knowledge, the alphabet ; origin uncertain. since it is possible, and not impnjbable, that many IXMlies
now considered elementary may be proved to l>e com-
The common derivation of the woril from alere, pound. There are over 70 eleinents at present (1899) rec-
nourish, which would identify ilementum with ognizetl by chemists, commonly divided inti> two grou^ps,
alimrnlum, nourishment (see aliment), is wholly namely, ntetals and the non-metallic hodiett or metaUoxds.
"Tlie non-metallic elements are hydrogen, clilorin, bro-
improbable. Several other derivations have mine, iodine, fiuorin, oxygen, sulphur, selenium, tellurium,
been proposed, of which one assnmes the orig. nitrogen, phosphorus, arsenic, antimony, bismuth, boron,
sense to be 'the alphabet,' the 'A-B-C,' or lit. silicon, and carbon. (.See mftalloid.) The remaining ele-
the ' L-M-N,' the word being formed, in this ments are regarded as metal.<t. (.See metal.) Five of the
elements, oxygen, nitrogen, hydrogen, chlorin. anil fiuorin,
view, <. el em + +
en, the names of the letters
are gases at onllnary temperatures; two, itromine and
L, M. N, +
the term, -titm, as in the common mercury, are liquids; the rest are solids. The properties
formative -mentum, E. -ment.] 1. That of which of all the elements bear a close relaUon to their atomic
118
; ; ; ;
Some eimnoitoi knowledge, I suppose, they (the druids] principles. Coleridge. [Rare.] Alisaundre that al wan elengelich ended.
[< element +
had; but I can scarcely be persuaded that their learning elementisht (el-e-men'tish), a. Piers Plowman (B), xiL 46.
was either deep or extensive. Elemental;
Burke, Abridg. of Eng. Hist.,
-is/t.] elementary. elengenesset, ellengnesst, n. [Early mod. E. eU
2. i.
If you mean of many natures conspiring together, as in lengness; < WE. ellengenesse.] Sorrow; trouble.
8. Of or pertaining to the elements of the mate- a popular government, to establish this fair estate, as if
rial world: more especially used of the mobile the elementisli and ethereal parts should in their town-
Eom. of the Rose.
elements, fire, air, and water, with reference to house set down the bounds of each one's ofllce, then con- Eleocharis (el-e-ok'a-ris), n. [NL., prop. "Be-
sider what leocharis, < Gr. cAof (gen. s/sog), low ground by
their violent or destructive action. See ele- dom which follows: that there must needs have been a wis-
made them concur. .Sir P. Sidney, Arcadia, iii. rivers, marsh-meadows, -I-
ment, 2 and 3. x°-'-P^'-^, rejoice, > x^-
possession or a dignity more troubles^>me and costly than displacing one another from behind forward, so that no
profitable in allusion to the rare and hiuhly venerated
;
premolars replace the deciduous teeth, and never more of the family
white eleptiants of the East Indies, which must be kept than one or two molars in functional position at once in Macroscelidw
in royal state, and which are said to l>e sometimes pre- either Jaw; and the grinding surfaces with several trans- or Bhynchocyo-
sented by the King of Siam to courtien whom he denre* vene ridges alternating with cement-valleys. The skull i»
very high in front, to acconin)o<late the roots of the tusks, nidw. In super-
to ruin.
there being a great development of diploic structure. ficial aspect they
Baiaine liethonght him of his master's natural anxiety The family Is divided into two subfamilies, Elephantimr resemble some of
to know the situation. That master was the vhite ele- and Mattodontince. .See cuts under elephant and Elephan- the jumping-mice
phant of Bazaine and the army. tinfr. or kangaroo-mice,
Arrh. Porbet, Souvenln of tome Continent*, p. Sg. especially of the
Elephantine (el'e-fan-ti'ne), n. pi. [NL., < American genera
Double elephant, a drawing- or writing-paper measor-
Elephas {-phant-) '+ -inte.'] The t^ical sub-
ins in Rni.'land M]
or 97 x 40 incbea, and in America Zapus and Dipo-
(wh'-r*' it u alH.> called dotMe royoO SO X 40 incbea.— family of the ElephanlidtB, containing the liv- tfomt/jt.havinglong Elephant-shrew {Afacroscelittet typictu^.
ing elephants and the extinct mammoths. They hind" limbs, well-
Elephant hawk-motli. seeAaint-iiKi<A.— Ordarof tlM
White Elephant, a Danish order alleged to be of great have the isomerous as distinguished from the hyplsome- developed ears, and the snout so long and sharp as to re-
antiffuity. Its foundation, however, is specifically as- semble a proboscis, whence the name. Also called ele-
cribed to Christian I.. IVIi, and its reorganization to fihant-mmtse and proboscis-fat.
Christian V. 1693. It is limited to ao knl«hts beside* the
, ephant's-tnsk (el'e-fants-tusk), n. mol- A
Dtembers of the royal family, and nopenon can be a knii^t lusk, Dentalium arciiatitm, one of the tooth-
wl>o i* not previously a member of the order of the Dane- shells.
brog. The collar of the order is compoaed allcmataly of
elephant* and embattled towen. Tlie liadge I* an ele- Elephas (el'e-fas), n. [NL., < L. elephas, < Gr.
phant tiearingon his back a tower, and on Us Dead adriver iliipaf,elephant: see elephant.'] The typical
dreaaed like a HindiL Tile ribbon to which the badge is genus of elephants, formerly embracing both
attached on ordinary occasions Is sky-blue.— RoffUe ele- the living species, or genera, now sometimes
nluuit. an elepliant of angovemably bad temper, which
uvea alone or apart from the herti. and is retnirded as restricted to the type represented by the Asi-
particularly dangerous.— To or to show the ele-Me atic elephant, Elephas indicus. In this restrict-
plUUtt, to see or exhibit something straUKt- <>r wonderful ed sense it is the same as Elasmodon and Euele-
especially, to see for the flnt time, or exhibit to a stran-
phas. See cuts under elephant.
ger, the siKhts and scene* of a great city (often Implying
thot' of a low or disreputable kind). (Slang, U. ai £lettaria (el-e-ta'ri-a), «. [NL.] An East
elephant-apple (erf-fant-ap'!), n. The wood- Indian genus of scitamineous plants, of only
appli' of luilia, Ferdnia elephantum, a large m- one or two species. E. Cardamomtim furnishes
taceous tree allied to the orange, and bearing Skelclon and OutDne of African Elephant ( Btefhat or iMradim the cardamom-seeds of commerce. See carda-
an orange-like fruit. The pulp of the fruit is a/ricanuj). mom.
/y. frontal; ma, mandible; ma', malar; Ji, "finger" at end of Eleusine [NL., appar. in refer-
acid, and is made into a jelly. trunk : C, cervical venebrx />, dorsal vertet>ra! ; fe. pelvis ; ic,
(el-ii-si'ne), fi.
ence to Eleusis (f): see Eleusinian,] A genus
;
elephant-beetle (erg-fant-be'tl), n. 1. A scapula; //, sternum ; Am, humerus: M/,ulna; ra, radius; M<r,meta-
cafpus;/ir> femur fat, patella; Ii6, titiia; Jit, fibula; m^t, meta-
iiatiii' of several lamelficorn scarabeoid beetles tarsus.
;
of grasses, belonging to the tribe Chloyidew,
of enormous size, flpedflcally— (a) Any species of having several linear spikes digitate at the sum-
ronsoranisomerous dentition, the transverse ridges of the mit of the culm. The species are natives of the warm-
ttiecetonian gi-nus^'o/iorAiM. Se» gdiath-beetle. (ft) Any
species of either of the genera Aynwtet and Mtgaioma.
molar* being three to five, the same on all the teeth, con-
er parts of the globe, and several are cultivated for their
tinuous, and the valleys filled with cement. The genera
M. eUphtu Is a large American species. Some of the ele- grain. In the East an Indian species, E. coracana (known
arc Elephan, Loxodon, and Steffodon, the last extinct.
phant-Deetlea, a* Difnatta hereviet of tropical America, nsnatchTiee, na<fla rngee, viand, and vturtva), is cultivated
elephaJltine (el-f-fan'tin), a.
attain a total lengtli of 6 inches, but of this the long pro- [= p. el^>han- as a com, from which the Tibetans make a weak beer. A'.
tlioracicbom make* about half. See cut under Hereute*- tin 8p. It. elefantino =
Pg. elephantine, < L. = «(rtc(o is also a pro<luctive grain, and the Abyssinian grain
beau. elephantinus, elephantine, also of ivory, < Gr. tocusso is the product of another species, A'. Tocimsq. E.
2. One of the rhynchophorous beetles or wee- eXe^vTivo^, of ivory, < i'Aiijxt^ (t ?jr0avr-), elephant, Indica, an annual species, is now naturalized in most warm
vils xo called from the long snout or proboscis. countries, and is good for grazing and soiling, and as
:
ivory: soe elephantJ] 1. Pertaining to the ele- hay.
elephant-bird (el'e-fant-b^'rd), n. fossil bird A
phant ; resembling an elephant. Eleusinia (el-fl-sin'i-S), n.pl. [L.,< Gr. 'EXfD-
of Madaga.sear, of tfie genus .^pyornis (which
With turcoisea divinely blue neut. pi. of 'E^eixTmof pertaining to Eleu-
aiviaj ,
seo (Though doubts arise where first they grew. sis, < 'E/Uwr/f C^ltvatv-), Eleusis.]
)
In Gr. antiq.
elephant-creeper (ere-fant-kre''p*r), n. The Whether chaste elephantine lx>ne
the famous Athenian mysteries and festival of
Argyrria npinnga, a coin vol vulaceous woody By min'rals ting'd, or native stone).
Sir W. Jonee, The Enchanted Fruit. Eleusis, symbolizing the various phases of hu-
climber of India, reaching the tops of the tall-
est trees, it* leave* are wblte-tomen(u*e beneath, and Hence 2. Elephant-like; huge; immense; — man life in the li^t of philosophic views as
to its eternity, and honoring Demeter (Ceres),
it* deep-ra*e-colored flower* are borne in axillary cymes. heavy; clumsy: as, he was of elephantine pro-
The leave* are oied for poultice* and in various cntaoeoos portions; elephantine movements. Cora (Proserpina), and the local Attic divinity
diseases, lacchos ( "\aKx<K) as the especial protectors of
But what insolent familiar durst have mated Thomas
elephanter (el-e-fan't^), n. A heavy periodi- Coventry ? —whose person was a gua<lrate, his step massy agriculture and of all fruitfulness, and the guar-
eal rain at Bombay. and elephantine. LairUf, Old Benchers. dians of Athens. Eleusinia, introduced from Athens,
:: ' : ; :
Crowds, aa was said, inundate the outer courts inun- the weight or importance of. elevator (el'f-va-tor), n. [= p. elevateur =
dation of young eleut/ieroinaniac Noblemen in English
:
eoDTeyers are nsed. Lifting elevators are also used In last moment just before it is too late : In allusion to the
; n, a. Relating or pertaining to elves.
and other works, to parable of the laborers in the vineyard. Mat. xx. 1-16.
flour-mills, (mnding-niills, furnaces, The mightiest chiefs of British song
handle materials of all kinds in bulk, as sand, ashes, n. n. 1. One of eleven equal parts; the quo- Scorned not such legends to prolong
ice, etc. . .
, tient of unity divided by eleven : as, five elev- They gleam through Spenser's elfin dream,
5. A building containing one or more mecnan- enths of fifty-five are twenty-five. And mix in Milton's heavenly theme,
Scott, Manuion, Int, L
ic'al elevators, especially a warehouse for the
Tlie crysoprase the tenthe is tyst
Btorase of grain. [U. S.] — Autodynamlc eleva-
The lacyngh the enleuenthe gent. Excalibur, . rich . .
with » ater under pressure It expands and raises the car alf, LG. elf= OHG. alp, MHG. alp (alb-), pi. elbe, Fell off in hoary flakes.
to lower it, the supply of water is cut o(f and that in the Coleridge, Ancient Mariner, iv.
and G. alp, m., MHG. elbe, 1. (G. elf, m., elfe, .,
,
f
tube is allowed to escape. The most common form of hy-
draulic elevator in the United States is that of a car lifted < E. elf), Icel. dlfr= =
Sw. alf, m., elfva, ., f el/-
2t. Distracted or be-witohed by elves; distraught
by ropes, operated by a pisUjn in a long cylinder. The rope
moved (in comp.),
pi. elfvor =
Dan. alf, elver- (in or abstracted, as if bewitched.
ii connected directly with the piston-rod, which is
comp.), an elf: a common Teut. word; tilt, He semeth elvyssh by his contenaunce.
by the admission of water under pressure. In some in-
stances the cylinder is horizontal and the travel of the pis- origin unknown. From the Icel. form dlfr, for For unto no wight doth he daliaunce.
ton limited, multiplying gear being titled tn the rope. The merly alfr, is the doublet aulf, awf, also writ Chaucer, Sir Thopas, Prol., 1. 13.
form
usual form is an upright cylinder with a very simple ten auph, ouph, and usually oa/, q. v., now elflshly, elvishly (el'fish-li, -vish-li), adv, In
of rope-gearing.— Pneumatic elevator, a hoisting or
discriminated in senses. Bee erl-king.'] 1. An the manner of elves ; mischievously,
lifUng apparatus worked by compressed air ; a pneumatic
hoist. imaginary being superstitiously supposed to in- g^^ ^^^ ^^^ ^^^^^ talking, and singing, and laughing
r nt
elevatory (el'e-va-to-n), a. ana n. [= F. 6l^a- habit unfrequented places, and in various ways „ost elvishly, with the invisibles of her own
-rt
race,
Scott, Peveril of the Peak, xvi.
toire = It. eleraiorio, < NL. 'elevatorius, < LL. to affect mankind; a sprite; a fairy; a goblin.
elevator, elevator: see elevator, elevate.'^ I. a. Elves
human
are usually imagined as diminutive tricksy beings
interferenc«*ither kind
tnc»nri,inu8lnterferenci»*ither
.riven tocapricious
in
-ifv«n Cfiif'lcinl n r< elf -r aim.
kind- ©U^UHeil "^"J;"- l^ eij
dim. -kin
/««.j +
A .ci. little
iii/no A
elevate.
form, given
t,,,,,,a.,/,,rm
Kaisiiig or tending to raise; having power to iy or mischievous, in human affairs. W
elf-king (elf 'king), fl. [= D. clfenkoning Dan. =
This was the olde opinion as I rede,—
Channels are almost universally present within the I si)€ke of manye hundred yeres ago,
dverkoiige.'] The king of the elves or fairies.
fringing reefs of those islands which nave undergone re-
Darwin, Coral Reefs, p. 78. But now kan uo man se none elves mo. elf-land (elf'land), n. The region of the elves;
cent eltaUory movements. Chaucer, Wife of Bath's Tale, 1. 6. fairy-land.
Among these tUvalory, and therefore reparative, agents, Every e{f, and fairy sprite,
the most important place must Iw assigned to earthquake* The horns of El/lartd taintly blowing.
and volcanoea. Huxley, Physiography, p. 186. Hop as light as bird from brier. Tennysmi, Princess, iiL
Shak., M. N. D., v. 2.
n. «• ; pl. eletatories (-riz). Same as elevo The elves also.
elf-lock (elf 'lok), n. A
knot of hair twisted by
tor, 3. Whose little eyes glow elves; a knot twisted as if by elves ; hence, in
616ve (a-lev'), n. [F., < iliver, raise, bring up, Like the sparks of Are, befriend thee. the plural, hair in unusual disorder.
educate, < L. elecare, raise: see eletate.\ A Herriek, Nlght-Piece to Julia. This is that very Mab,
pupil one brought up, educated, or trained
;
by 2. A mischievous or vricked person ; a knave That plats the manes of horses in the night.
And bakes the el/-locks in foul sluttish hairs,
aiiotlier. a rogue. Which, once untangled, much misfortune bodes.
eleven (e-lev'n), a. and ». [< ME. eOeven, en- Bid htm, without more ado. Shak., R. and J., i. 4.
Icicii, enlecene, enleve, elleocen, eUeove, endlete, Surrender Umself, or else the proud el/
Shall suffer with all his crew. you knot or elf-lock; which nothing
will pull all Into a
etc., < .AS. endleo/an, endlufon, endlyifoH (= OS. but the shears or a candle will undo.
Bolnn Hood and th» Valiant Knight (Child's Ballads,
Oef, devan, eleven, ellevan =
OFries. andlova, at- [V. 88»). B. JoHson, Magnetick Lady, Ind.
vene, ellera =J).elf =
L». eleve, Slice, olmen = Spite of all the criticising elves. Ragged el/locks hanging down to the breast.
OHG. einUr, MHG.
einli/, einlef, eilef, eilf, G. must feel themselves. ii. F. Burton, El-Medinah, p. 319.
Those who would make us feel,
eilj, elf= Icel. elli/ii, later elle/u, 8w. elfva = = Churchill, The Rosciad, L 961.
elf-locked (elf 'lokt), a. Wearing elf-locks ; -with
Dau. ellere =Goth, ainlif), eleven, orig. 'dnli/ 3. A
diminutive person; a dwarf; hence, a disheveled or tangled hair. [Poetical.]
(the first syllable (end-, <dn) having been modi- pet name for a child, especially one who is very The el/elockt fury all her snakes had shed.
fied by shortening and mutation with dissimi- sprightly and graceful. =Syn. 1. Sprite, hobgoblin. Sir R. Stapteton, tr. of Juvenal, vii. 83.
lated gemination of n to iirf, and the last syl- Imp.— 8. Urchin, dwarf.— 1 and 3. Fay, Gnome, etc. .See
(elf 'kwen), n. [< ME. elfqueen; < elf
elf-queen
lable (-an, -on) added as a quasi-plural suffix), /airy.
-i- queen.'\ The queen of the elves or fairies.
< an (= Goth, ain, etc.), one, +
-lif, an element elf (elf), V. t. [< elf, n., in allusion to the mis-
AS. Uoelf, E.= chievousness ascribed to elves. Cf. elf-lock.} The el/queeM with hir joly compaignye
appearing also in Goth, tiealif Daunced ful ofte in many a grene mede.
ticcire, etc. (see twelve), and appar. Lith. = To entangle intricately, as the hair. [Bare.] ChaiMr, Wife of Bath's Tale, L 4.
-lika, in r«noUJka, eleven, where the element is My face I'll grime with filth
Gr. <J^«ra = Blanket my loins; el/M my hair in knots.
elf-shot (elf 'shot), o. Shot by an elf.
by some supposed to stand for 'dika Lear, There, every herd, by sad experience, knows
= L. decern =
E. ten, making the Teut. and
Shak., 11. 3.
and one. 2. — A
symbol representing eleven they ^^ had stolen ; a _ changeling. 2. disease supposed to be produced by the
A
units, as 11, or XI., or xi.— 3. A
team or side elf-dart (elf'dilrt), n, Same as elf-bolt. agency of elves. [Scotch.]
in cricket or foot-ball: so called because regu- elf-dock (elf'dok), n. See docfci, 2. elf-skint (elf'skin), n. word found only in A
larly consisting of eleven players: as, the Phil- elf-flre (elf 'fir), n, A
common name for ignis the following passage, where it is probably a
ailflphia cleren; there were two strong elevens fatuus. misprint for eel-skin (in allusion to Prince Hen-
mat<'hed. eifln (el'fin), ». and a. [An artificial (poeti- ry's long and lank figure).
eleven-o'clock-lady (f-lev'n-o-klok-la'di), n. cal) form, first used by Spenser; in form as if Fat. Away, you starveling, you eJAsttn, you dried
neat's-
[Tr. F. dome (Fonze heures.'] 'flie star-of -Beth- an adj. (for 'elfen, < elf -en), but it first ap- + tongue. Shak., 1 Hen. IV., ii. 4.
lehem, Ornilliogtilum umbellatum. pears as a noun, and in det. 2 is appar. regard- elf-stone (elf'stdn), n. Same as elf-bolt.
eleventh (e-lov'nth), a. and n. [< ME. ellev- ed as diminutive. Cf. AS. elfen, alfen, wlbin elger (el'gfer), ». [E. dial., < ME. elger,elyer (=
enth': cUn-i-nd, cideventhe, endlefte, enlefte, etc., (usually in comp.) (= MHG. elbinne), a fairy, MD. aelghecr, elgheer, D. aalgeer), ult. < AS. ml,
< AS. endlyfta (= OS. ellifto =
OFries. ellefta, nymph, fem. of ailf, an elf: see elf.} I. ». 1. eel, +
gdr, spear: see gar, gorc^.} An eel-
elefta, alfta, andlofta = =
D. el/de OHG. einlUto, An elf; an inhabitant of fairy-land: in Spenser spear. Prompt. Pan., p. 138. [Local, Eng.]
MHG. einlifle, einUfte, eil/te, G. elfte Icel. =
applied to his knights. Elgin marbles. Bee marble.
ellifti, mod. ehefti =
Dan. ellevte Sw. elfte, = He was an Elfin borne of noble state Eliac (e'li-ak), a. Pertaining to Elis, an
ancient
eleventh: as eleven (AS. endleofan, etc.) -th, +
And mickle worship in his native land. city of the Greek Peloponnesus. Also
&'««»•
the ordinal suffix: see -^3.] I. a. 1. Next in Spetuier, ¥. Q., II. 1. 6.
-EUac school, a school of philosophy founded in Elis by
Its doctrines
order after the tenth: an ordinal number. 2. little urchin or child. A [Playful.] PhB!.!.., a scholar and favorite of Socrates.
somewhat skep-
are conjcctnic-d to have been ethical, and
But aboute the eUevenlhe hour he wente out and founde tical ccmceming the theory of cognition.
For she was just, and friend to virtuous lore.
other stondrnge, and he seide to hem, what stonden ye
Wycli/, Mat xx. And pass'd much time In truly virtuous deed; elicit (e-lis'it), V. t. [< L. elieitus, pp. of elicere,
Idel heere al dal 1
And In those elfins' ears would oft deplore draw out, < e, out, lacere, entice: see lace. +
2. Constituting one of eleven equal parts into The times, when truth by Popish rage did bleed. draw out; bring forth or to
Shenstone, The Schoolmistress, st. 15. Cf. allect.} To
which anything is divided : as, the eleventh part light; evolve; gain: as, to eKcit sparks by
col-
of fifty-five is five At tbe eleventli hour, at the -Syn. See /airy, n.
; ;
cal genus of Eligmid(E. into the economy of a substance which is not exactly
elicitt (e-lis'it), a. [< L. elicitus, pp. see the : either food or drink, but something as important as either
verb.] 1. Immediately directed to an end: elimatet
(el'i-mat or e-li'mat), v. t. [< L. eli- — to wit, oxygen. Huxley and Youmans, Physiol., § 29.
matus, pp. of elimare', fiile, polish, < e, out, +
opposed to imperate. eliminatory (e-lim'i-na-to-ri),
limare, file, < lima, a file.] To render smooth; a. [< eliminate
To give alma ia a proper and act of charity.
elicite
polish. + -ory.] Eliminative.
Jer. Taylor, Kule of Conscience, ii. 3.
eliminable (e-lim'i-na-bl), a. [< L. eliminare, Clironic irritation set up in the eliminatory organs by
2. Performed by the will itself without the eliminate: see -able.]" Capable of being elimi- the excretion of incompletely oxidized nitrogenous mat-
aid of any other faculty: as, volition, nolition, nated.
ter. Med. Sews, LII. 294.
choice, consent, and the like are elicit acts op- :
Cumulative error, not elitnirmble by working in a circuit, elinguatet (e-ling'gwat), v. t. [< L. elinguatus,
posed to imperate. may be caused when there is much northing or southing pp. of elinguare, deprive of the tongue, < e,
The schools dispute whether in morals the external ac- in the direction of the line. Jincyc. Brit., XXII. 707. out, lingua +
E. tongue.] To cut out the =
tion superadds anything of good or evil to the internal
eliminant (e-lim'i-nant), tongue of.
act of the will.
elicit South, Works, I. 3. [< L. eUminan{t-)s,
n.
ppr. of eliminare, turn out of doors ; see elimi- The damned Doomes-man hath Him judg'd to death,
elicitatet (e-lis'i-tat), v. t. [< elicit + -ate^.'i nate.] In math., a function of the coefficients The Diu'll that Dlull elinguate for his doome.
To elicit. Davies, Holy Roode, p. 14.
of any number of homogeneous equations
And make it streme with light from forms innate. among the same number of quanti- elinguationt (e-ling-gwa'shon), n.
unknown [< LL. elin-
Thus may a skilful man hid truth elicitate. ties, such that the vanishing of the neces- guatio(n-), < L. elinguare, deprive of the tongue:
it is
Dr. H. More, Sleep of the Soul, ii. 41. see elinguate.] In old Eng. law, the punishment
sary and sufficient condition of the equations
elicitationt (e-lis-i-ta'shon), n. [< elicitate + being consistent with one another. [The word of cutting out the tongue.
-ion.] The act of eliciting, or of drawing out. was introduced by De Morgan. Many writers elingoidt (f-ling'gwid), a. [With irreg. term.
-id, < L. elinguis, without a tongue, speechless,
That elicitatioji which the schools intend is a deducing continue to use Bezout's word, resultant.]
of thepower of the will Into act that drawing which they
; eliminate (e-lim'i-nat), V. t. ; pret. and pp. elim- < e, out, -t- lingua E. tongue.] Tongue-tied=
mention is merely from the appetibility of the object. inated, ppr.' eliminating. not having the power of speech. Coles.
[< L. eliminatus, pp.
Bp. Bramhall.
of elimirjf^ (> It. eliminare Sp. Pg. eliminar Eliomys (e-li'o-mis), n. [NL. (Wagner, 1843), <
=
elide (e-lid'), v. t; pret. and pp. elided, ppr. = F. Glimmer), turn out of doors, banish, < e, Gr. fto(5f or ihidc, a kind of dormouse, Myoxus
eliding. [= Sp. Pg. elidir It. elidere, < L. eli- = out, + limen (limin-), a threshold, akin to limes glis, + /iif, mouse.] A genus of dormice, of the
dere, knock, strike, or dash out, force out, press family Myoxidw, with distichous tufted tail and
(Km(7-), a boundary: see limit.] If. To go be-
out, in gram. (tr. Gr. iK0U[itiv: see ecthlipsis) yond the limit or limits of. simple stomach. There are several species,
suppress (a vowel), < e, out, Icedere, strike, + In thy wreathed cloister thou
the best-known of which, E. nitela, is the lerot,
hurt by striking: see lesion. Cf. collide.'] If. Walkest thine own gray friar too about 6 inches long.
To break or dash in pieces crush. ; Strict, and lock'd up, thou'rt hood all o'er. eliquament (e-Uk'wa-ment), «. [< LL. as if
Before we answer unto these things, we are to cut off
And ne'er eliminat'st thy door. 'eliquamentum, < eliquafe, clarify, strain: see
that whereunto they from whom these objections proceed Lovelace, The Snail. eliquate.] A
liquid expressed from fat, or from
do oftentimes fly for defence and succour, when the force 2. To thrust out; remove, throw aside, or dis- fat fish.
and strength of their arguments is elided. regard as injurious, superfluous, irrelevant, or eliquate (el'i-kwat), v. t.j pret. and pp. eliqttai-
Hooker, Eccles. Polity, iv. 4.
for any reason undesirable or unnecessary ex- ed, ppr. eliquating. ; [< L. eliquatus, pp. of eli-
2. In gram., to suppress or slur over the soimd pel get rid of. quare, cause to flow, pour forui, clarify, strain,
;
of in speech, or note the suppression of in writ- Ttiis detains secretions which nature finds it necessary <L. e, out, + Kguore, melt, liquefy : see liquate.]
ing : technically applied especially to the cut- to eliminate. Hed. Repos. To separate, as one metal from another. See
ting oflE of a final vowel, as in "th' enemy," but liquaU.
Now here the obvious method occurs of sifting the
in a more general sense to that of a syllable masses, so as to eliminate the worst elements and retain eliquation (el-i-kwa'shgn), n. [< LL. eliqua-
or anv part of a word. See elliion, 1. the best. Prof. Blackie. 1io{n-), a liquefying, < eliquare, cause to flow
eligibility (el"i-ji-bil'i-ti), n. [< eligible: see Scientific truths, of whatever order, are reached by elim- freely, pour forth, clarify, strain: see eliquate .]
-biUtij.] 1. Worthiness or fitness to be cho- inating perturbing or conflicting factors, and recognizing See liquation.
sen the state or quality of a thing which ren- only fundamental factors.
;
H. Spencer, Data of Ethics, § 104. EliS (e'lis), m. [NL. (Fabricius, 1804).] A ge-
ders it desirable or preferable to another. nus of fossorial hymenopterous insects, of the
Sickness hath some degrees of eligibility, at least by an 3. In math., to remove (a quantity) from a sys- family Scoliidce. The eyes are subreniform in both
after-choice. Jer. Taylor, Holy Dying, vi. § 3. tem of equations by the reduction of the number sexes, and the front wings have two recurrent uervures.
2. Capability of being chosen to an office: the of equations. Thus, if we have two equations express-
ing respectively the rates at which an orange growing on a
condition of being qualified to be chosen ; legal tree increases in bulk and in weight, we can combine them
qualification for election or appointment. so as to eliminate the time, and so olttain an equation ex-
eligible (el'i-ji-bl), a. and n. [< OF. eligible, F. pressing the relation between the bulk and the weight.—
eligible = It. eligibile, < ML. *eligibilis, that may To eUminate the personal equation. See equation.
(Tile use of eliminate as a synonym of elicit, deduce, sepa-
be chosen (in adv. compar. eligibiliits), < L. eli- rate, etc., practised by some writers, is without justifica-
gere,choose: see elect.] I. a. 1. Fit to be tion.
chosen; worthy of choice; desirable: as, an Newton, . . . having eUmiTiated the great law of the
eligible tenant. natural creation. J. D. Morell.
Peace with men can never be eligiUe when it implies To eliminate the real effect of art from the effects of the
enmity with God. Bp. Atterbury, Sermons, II. xxiv. abuse. Ru3kin.]
While health endures, the latter part of life, in the eye elimination (e-lim-i-na'shon), n. [=
F. elimi-
of reason, is certainly the more eligible..
Steele, Spectator, No. 153.
nation = Sp. eliminadon = Pg. eliminagao It.=
eliminazione, < L. as if *eUminatio(n-), < elimi-
Certainty, in a deep distress, is more eligible than sus-
pense. Richardson, Clarissa Harlowe.
nare, thrust out of doors: see eliminate.] 1. A
thrusting out; the act of removing, throwing
Through tomes of fable and of dream
I Bought an theme.
eligible
aside, or disregarding ; expulsion ; riddance. Etis quadrinotata, natural size.
Cowper, Annus Meniorabilis, 1789. The preparatory step of the discussion was, therefore, They are large wasps of scoliid habits, of which 9 Korth
2. Qualified to be chosen legally qualified for an elimination of those less precise and appropriate sig- American and 6 European species are known. E. qua-
;
nifications which, as they would at best only afford a re- drinotata and E. plnmipes inhabit the southern United
election or appointment. mote genus and dilTerence, were wholly incompetent for States, where they have been found on cotton-plants,
Among the Mundnicus, the possession of ten smoke- the purpose of a definition. Sir W. Hamilton.
=
dried heads of enemies renders a man eligible to the rank
elision (e-lizh'pn), n. [= F. 4lision Sp. elision
of chief. //. Spencer, Prin. of Sociol., § 350.
By means of researches on different coloured light it is
now ascertained that those rays whicli cause the liveliest
= Pg. elisSo =
It. elisiotie, elision, < L. elisio{n-),
a striking or pressing out, in gram. (LL.) the
H. n. One who is qualified to be chosen or elimination of oxygen belong to the less refrangible half
suppression of a vowel (tr. Gr. iKBlifi^: see
elected; an eligible person. of the spectrum. Lommel, Light (trans.), p. 196.
ecthlipsis), < elidere, pp. elisus, strike out, press
The certification of all the eligihles will result in what 2. In law, the act of banishing or turning out
you have applauded. The American, XII. 132. of doors; ejection. —
3. In math., the process
out: see elide.] 1. A
striking or cutting off;
specifically, in gram., the cutting off or sup-
eligibleness (el'i-ji-bl-nes), «. The state of of reducing a number of equations containing
pression of a vowel or syllable, naturally or for
being eligible fitness to be chosen in prefer- certain quantities to a smaller number, in
; the sake of euphony or meter, especially at
ence to another; suitableness; desirableness. which one or more of the quantities shall not
the end of a word when the next word begins
be found Dlalytlc elimination. See dialytic.—
It [citizenship] embraced certain private rights, and cer-
Eiiler's method of elimination, a method of eliminat-
with a vowel; more generally, the suppres-
tain political rights ; these last being principally the right sion of any part of a word in speech or writ-
ing an unknown quantity between two equations of the
of suffrage, and eluribleness to office.
mth and nth degrees respectively, which consists in mul- ing: as, in "th' embattled plain" there is an
O. P. Fisher, Begin, of Christianity, p. 49.
tiplying the first by an indeterminate expression of the elision of e; in "I'll not do it" there is an
eligibly (el'i-ji-bli), adv. In an eligible man- (n — l)th degree and the second by an indeterminate ex-
ner so as to be worthy of choice or capable of pression of the (in —
l)th degree, and e(iuating separately
elision of wi.
;
election.
the m -i- n terms so olStalned. 'The determinant express- The Italian is so full of Vowels, that it must euer bo
ing their compatibility is the eliminant required. cumbred with Elisions. Sir P. Sidney, Apol. for Foetrl«L
; :
—
THlTlr a. elch, < Icel. elgr Sw. elg Norw. elg Dan. = = =
OneClCiua, . . .
proprletatis, a decoction of aloes, saffron, and myrrh in els-dyr (for "elgs-dyr)
vinegar. Commonly abbreviated elixir pro.
L. alces Gr. akav (the = =
Hurt Enea* afterward etit to wed. L. and Gr. perhaps of Teut. origin), elk. D.
DetlTuetion o/ Troy (E. T. S.), L 1490. K Paracelsus declared them an elixir made of aloes, saf- eland, an elk (also, in South Africa, an eland),
fron, and myrrh would prove a vivifying and preserving
A mare yboned sadde, ybulked greet, balsam, able to continue health and long life to its utmost
G. elend, elen, usually elen-thier (thier E. deer, =
Yformed nobully most been elite ;
And though she be not swyfte, a strong one gete. UmiU;. and hence he calls it by^ the lofty of a beast), elk, are or other origin: see eland.]
„..^ title oi elixir „,
PaUadiut, Husbondrle (E. E. T. S.), p. 136. propriety to man ; but concealed the preparation, in which 1 . Properly, the largest existing European and
Uelmont asserts the alcahest is required.
«litet, ». [Sc. also elyte (obs.); < ME. eliU, < P. Shaw, Chemistry, Process 81.
OF. elit, eslit, elected, pp. of elire, eslire, elect EllTlr vltw. See above, 1.— Elixir vltsB of Kathlolus,
see elite, r., and elect, r. and n.] One chosen; a compound of alcohol and upward of twenty aromatic
a person elected. and stimulating substances, at one time administered in
epilepsy.
The pape wild not consent, he quaued ther
Hobert of Brunne,
etilt.
eludr (e-lik's6r), v. t. [< elixir, n.] To give
tr. of Langtoft's Chron. (ed. HeameX the character of an elixir
Ip. aoo.
to. [Kare.]
Yourself you have a good physician shown.
tiite (a-lef), n. [P., < OF. eslite, < elire, eslire,
To his much grieved friends, and to your own.
F. Hire, choose, pp. elit, enlit, Hit, choice : see In giving this «furtr'd medicine.
elite, and elect, r. and n.] A
choice or select For greatest grief a sovereign anodyne.
body; the best part: as, the ^lite of society. Lovelace, To Capt, Dudley Lovelace.
elixt (f-Uks'), r. t. [< LL. eliiare, boil thor- elixiviatet (e-Uk-siv'i-at), V. t. [< L. e, out, +
oughly, seethe, < L. elixus, thoroughly boiled, E. lixiviate.] To lixiviate or refine thoroughly.
seethed, < e, out, +
lixare (rare), boil, < lit, Boyle.
ashes, lye.] To extract. elixiviationt (e-lik-siv-i-a'shon), n. [< elixivi-
With a stimine of fresh Invention, ate -ion.] +
complete or thorough process A
She might prease out the raritie of Art of lixiviation.
The pur'st itiaed ]ayoe of rich concelpt
Jfortton, Antonio and Mellida, Prol.
And by examining these substances by fit and proper
ways, as also the cap. mort. by calcination, eliximatum,
elixatet (f-lik'sat), t;. t. [< LL. eliratus, pp. of and (If It will bear such a fire) vitrification. Elk {yllcrt malchtt).
lixare, boil thoroughly: see elii.] To boil; BogU, Works, IV. 800.
seethe; extract by boiling. Sichardson. Asiatic species of the deer family, or CervidiE,
Elizabethan (e-liz-a-beth'au), a. Of or per-
Alces malchis (formerly called Cervus alces). it
elixationt (el-ik-sa'shon), H. [= P. fixation =
taining to Elizabetfi (daughter of Henry VlII.
stands when full-grown alwut 7 feet high at the withers,
Sp. elijui-ion =
Pg. elixa^So, < LL. as if 'elixa- and Anne Boleyn), (Jueen of England from 1558 and bears enonnous palmate antlers weighing sometimes
tio(n-), < elixare, pp. elixatus, boil thoroughly: to 1603, or to her times. 50 or 60 pounds. Its nearest living relative is the Ameri-
see elixate.] The cooking, especially of meat. Anew crop of geniuses like those of the Elizabethan age can moose.
by boiling; extraction by boiling; also, con- may be bom In tola age, and, with happy heart and a bias 2. In America, the wapiti, Cervus canadensis, a
coction in the stomach digestion. ;
for theism, bring aaoetlciam, duty, and magnanimity into very different animal from the elk proper, rep-
vogne again. Bmermn, In .V. A. Rev., CXXVI. 417. resenting the red deer or stag of Europe, C.
Blixation Is the seething of meat In the stomach, by the
said naturall heat, as meat is boiled In a pot ; to which Elizabethan architecture, a name given to the mixed
or drliaiK'd arcliittcture of the times of Elizabeth and
elaphus. See wapiti and Alces. —
3. In Asia,
corruption or putrefaction la opposite.
James I., when tbe worst forms of the Pointed and de-
among the Anglo-Indians, some large rusine or
Burton, Anat. of MeL, p. 20. rucervine deer or stag, as the sambur, Cervus
generate Italian styles were combined, producing a sin-
The fleshwhich was Included live weeks ago was this aristotelis. These, like the wapiti of America, are re-
day found very good. I do not doubt but uat perfect lated more or less nearly to the red deer or stag, and are
WkKition was able to contribute something to Ita prawr- quite unlike the true elk and the moose.
~" ae the nndrr principles of which fleah eoo-
Tation, 'because
ilitetb bad, whilst the neat continued, exerted their
4. Same as etond, 1 — Elk bark. See iortz.— Irish
elk, the Cervus or Meijaceroti hibemicus, a very large ex-
•trancth DDoa one anotiwr far better than U, tbe fleab b»
tinct elk, with enormous palmate antlers, the remains of
\sm >• boiled, br nuoo of tbe great avolation of parte, which occur in the peat-bogs of Ireland,
had bean lemored tron the Ore, aa biqipeoa in onUoaiy
coctlooa. elk* (elk), n. [E. dial., formerly also elke, tike;
BoyU, SeooDd Ooutln. of Ezperlmeata, Arl xiz., Exp. S. ME. not found; perhaps a corruption of AS.
elixir {«-lik's6r), n. [Formerly also elixar; < elfetu, ylfete (for *ylfetu), earlier (Kentish) aeU
MH. elixir =
D. elizer =
Sw. Dan. G. elixir, < bitu = OHG. alpiz, elbiz, MHG. elbez, a swan.]
OK. elixir, F. Hixir =
Pg. elexir =
It. elisire, <
The wild swan, or hooper, Cygntts ferus. Mon-
8p. elixir, elixir, < Ar. el iksir, the philosopher's tagu. [Local, Eng.]
stone: el, al, the; iksir, philosopher's stone, In water black as Styx, swims the wild swan, the itke.
by some derived from kasara, break, break the Of Hollfenders so termed. Ih-ayton, Polyolblon, xxv.
edge, destroy, but prob. (like some other Ar. elk^ (elk), n. [Origin uncertain; It. elee, dial.
terms of alchemy: see alchemy, alembie, lim- (Sardinian) elighe =
Pr. euze =
F. yetise, < L.
beck) of Gr. origin < Gr. f7p<if also ffp^, dry,
: , ilex (ilic-), the holm-oak: see Ilex.] kind A
perhaps akin to x^pad^, x'Ppoi, dry see Chersus, : of yew of which bows are made. Malliicell.
Chersonese.] 1. In a2cA«my, a soluble solid sub- [Prov. Eng.]
stance which was believed to have the property £lkesaite, n. See Elcesaite.
'
of tranHrauting baser metals into silver or gold elknut (elk'nut), n. The Pyrularia olei/era,
and of prolontniiK life. Tbe i/rtat elixir, also called a santalaceous shrub of the southern United
thf phUoAoj.lier « iIqiu. or the red tincture, when shaken
States. Also called oilnut.
la very small quantity into melted silver, lead, or other
base metal, was said to transmute it Into gold. In minute elk-tree (elk'tre), n. The sourwood or sorrel-
doeea It was sappoied to prolong life and restore youth, tree of the United States, Oxydendrum arbo-
•ad was then called tliet(6ir*<(<>. Tbe leetr elirir, lUme reum.
yihteeeond elan, or tMU
Hnetwv, was renrded as bar-
Sttsabethan Architecture.— Haigrave Hall, W"g<«~< elkwood (eUc'wfid), n. Theumbrella-tre^ Mag-
log tbeae qualltlea In leaser degree; thus It transmuted
baaer metals Into sOver. The word Is now often used nolia Umbrella, of the southern United States,
flfiiratively.
gular heterogeneousneas In detail, with, however, much a small tree with soft, light, close-grained
pictnresqueness In general effect. Its chief characteristics
A nay lat be ; the pbiloeopfares stoon,
! ! are windows large, either in the plane of the wall or deeply
:
wood.
Slixir clept,we secben faste echoon. embayed, long galleries, tall and highly decorated chim- elll (el), n. [< ME. elle, elne, < AS. eln, an ell
Chaucer, ProL to Canon's Veomao's Tale, L SU). neys, and a profuse use of ornamental strapwork in par- (18, 20^, 24, etc., inches), D. el, elle OHG. = =
! ; + — :
eU 1880 Ellopia
elina, ehta, MHG. eUne, elne, ellen, G. elle = Icel. Titirmv, leave. Cf. ellipsis.} In geom., a plane are the same as those of a given body. Momental el- —
alin = Sw. aln =
Dan. alen Goth, aleina (for= curve such that the sums of the distances of lipsoid, or Inverse ellipsoid of inertia, a surface of
which every radius vector is inversely proportional to the
*oWnaf), an ell, whence It. auna, F. aM««, an each point in its periphery from two fixed points, radius of gyration of the body about tliat radius vector
ell; orig. the forearm (as in AS. eln-boga, E. the foci, are equal. It is a conic section (see conic) as an axis. This is sometimes called Poinsot's ellipsoid,
elbow), =
L. ulna, the forearm, the elbow, an ell, formed by the intersection of a cone by a plane which cuts though invented by Cauchy.— Keoiprocal ellipsoid of
= Gr. (jXfv^, the forearm: see elbow, ulna.'} A obliquely the axis and the opposite sides of the cone. The
ellipse is a conic which does not extend to infinity, and
expansion, the surface of which each radius vector is in-
versely proportional to the square root of the linear ex-
long measuire, chiefly used for cloth. The English whose intersections with the line at infinity are imaginary. pansion in the same direction. Strain-ellipsOld, or el-—
ell,not yet obsolete, is a yard and a quarter, or 45 inches. Every ellipse has a center, lipsoid of expansion, tlie ellipsoid into which any strain
This unit seeius to have been imported from France un- which is a point sucli that it transforms any infinitesimal sphere in a body.
der the Tudors and a statute of 1409 recognizes no dif-
;
bisects every chord passing
ference between the ell (aune) and tlie yard (verge). The ellipsoidal (el-ip-soi'dal), a. Of the form of an
through it. Such chords are
Scotch ell was 37 Scotch inches, or 37.0958 English inches. ellipsoid.
called diameters of the el-
The so-called Flemish ell differed in different places, but lipse. A
pair of conjugate elliptic, elliptical (e-lip'tik, -ti-kal), a. [= F.
averaged 27.4 English inches. Other well-ascertained ells
were the following: ell of Austria, 30.676 English inches;
diameters bisect, each of elliptique =
op. eliptico Pg. elUptico =
It. el- =
of Bavaria, 82.702 inches ; of Bremen, 22.773 inches of ;
them, all chords parallel to
the other. The longest di-
littico, elittico (cf. D. G. elliptisch Dan. Sw. =
Cassel, 22.424 inches; of France, 47.245 inches; of Poland, elliptisk), < ML. elliptious, < Gr. eXkenzTiKog, in
ameter is called the trans-
22.650 inches of Prussia, 26.2.59 inches of Saxony, 22.267
; ;
verse axis, also the la- EUipse.
grammar, elliptical, defective, < i'A'Aet^ic ("eA-
inches; of Sweden, 23.378 inches. The ell of Holland tus transversum; it passes Aeott-), ellipsis, ellipse: see ellipse, eUipsis.} 1.
is now the meter. See cubit, pik, endazeh, kut braccio, F and J^' are the foci. FM
khaUb.
through the foci.
shortest diameter is called
The MF- = FAf- -f- MF M ,and AT
being any points in the curve.
Pertaining to an ellipse; having the form of an
He was, I must
you, but seven foot high,
tell the conjugate axis. The ex-
ellipse. lElliptical is the more common form
And, may be, an ell in the waste. tremities of the transverse axis are called the vertices. (See except in technical uses, and is frequent in
Robin Hood and Little John (Child's Ballads, V. 221). conic, eccentricity, angle.) An ellipse may also be regard- them.]
O, here's a wit of cheverel that stretches from an inch —
ed as a flattened circle that is, as a circle all the chords In horses, oxen, goats, sheep, the pupil of the eye is el-
narrow to an ell broad Shak., R. and J., ii. 4. of which parallel to a given chord have been shortened in _
latus rectum. In the case of the parabola there is no la- lipse a point where the principal tangents are imaginary.
Chaucer. ;
tus transversum, but the line BK extends to infinity, and —Elliptic polarization, in optics. See piiarizalion.—
elleborin (el'e-bo-rin), n. [< L. elleborus, helle- the rectangle equal to the square of the ordinate has the Elliptic singularity, an ordinary or inessential singu-
borus, + -in: see hellebore.} A
resin of an ex- latus rectum for one side.] —
Cubical ellipse. See cm&i- larity of a function. See singularity. Elliptic space. —
tremely acrid taste, found in the Helleborus hie- cai.— Focal ellipse. See/ocai.—Inflnlte ellipse. Same (a) Tlie space inclosed by an ellipse, (b) See space. El- —
malis, or winter hellebore. as eZKp(ois.— Logarithmic ellipse, the section of an el- liptic spindle, a surface generated by the revolution of
liptic cylinder by a paraboloid. Booth, 1852. an elliptic arc about its chord.
elleck (el'ek), n. [E. dial. origin unknown. ;
ellipsis (e-lip'sis), «.; pi. ellipses (-sez). [= D. elliptically (e-lip'ti-kal-i), adv. 1. According
Cf. Elleck, Ellick, Ellek, etc., colloquial abbre-
viations of Alexander.] A local English name Sw. ellips =
G. Dan. ellipse =
P. ellipse Sp. to the form of an ellipse.
=
of the red gurnard, Trigla cuculus. elipsis =Pg. ellipse =
It. ellisse, elisse, < L. ellip- Reflection from the surfaces of metals, and of very high
refractive substances such as diamond, generally gives at
eller^ (el'fer), n. A dialectal form of elder^. sis, < Gr. iXkuiln^, omission, ellipsis: see ellipse.}
In gram. omission
all incidences elliptically polarised light.
a figure of syntax by
eller^ (el'^r), n. A dialectal form of alder^. 1 . ,
used
Tait, Light, § 287.
EUerian (e-le'ri-an), n. A member of a sect for the whole, by the omission of one or more
is
2. In the manner of or by an ellipsis; with
of German MOlenarians of the eighteenth cen- something left out.
tury, founded by Elias EUer (died 1750). The words, leaving the full form to be understood
ellipticity (el-ip-tis'i-ti), n. [< elliptic + -ity.}
EUerians expected the Messiah to be born again of the or completed by the reader or hearer: as, "the
wife of their leader, whose professed revelations they ac- heroic virtues I admire," for "the heroic vir-
The quality of being elliptic; the degree of
cepted as of equal authority with the Bible. From lions- divergence of an ellipse from the circle spe- ;
tues which I admire"; "prythee, peace," for
dorf, the place of their settlement, they are also called
"/pray thee, hold thy peace." 2. In print- cifically, — in reference to the figure of the earth,
difference between the equatorial and polar
Ronadorfians.
ellem, a. A dialectal form of aldern. ing, a mark or marks, as —
,***,..., de- the semi-diameters divided by the equatorial as, :
ellest, adv. A Middle English form of else. noting the omission or suppression of letters
— the ellipticity of the earth is j^j. it may also
ellipochoanoid (el"i-po-kd'a-noid), a. and n.
(as in A; 17 f or to'^jr) or of words. 3t. In geom.,— without appreciable error be taken as twice the difference
[See ElUpochoanoida.} I. a. Having incom- an ellipse. divided by the sum of the two axes.
plete septal funnels specifically, of or pertain-
; When a right cone is cut quite through by an inclining In 1740 Maclaurin gave the equation connecting the
. . .
ing to the ElUpochoanoida. Also ellipochoanoi- plane, the figure produced by the section agrees well with dlipticitywith the proportion of the centrifugal force at
the received notion of an ellipsis, in which the diameters the equator to gravity. Encyc. Brit., VII. 600.
dal. are of an unequal length. Boyle, Works, IV. 464.
II. n. A member of the ElUpochoanoida. elliptograpb (e-lip'to-graf), n. Same as ellip-
ElUpocIloanoida (el"i-po-k6-a-noi'da), n. pi. ellipsograph. _(e-lip'so-^raf), n. [Prop, ellipto- sograpii.
[NL., < Gr. omitting, falling short (< ck- graph; < Gr. ilXei-^i^ {*£A?.aTrT-), ellipse (see el-
k'AXi-iTfjQ,
elliptoid (e-lip'toid), a. and n. [< ellipt-ic +
Aeiireiv, omit, fall short: see ellipse), -I- xoo-vri, a lipse), -i- ypaijieiv, write.] An instrument for de- -aid.}I, a. Somewhat like an ellipse.
funnel, -1- -ida.} A
group of nautiloid ceph- scribing ellipses; a trammel. Also elliptograph. II. n. Same
as elliptois.
alopods whose septal funnels are short, the ellipsoid (e-lip'soid), n. [< Gr. eTA'Aetipti;, ellipse, ellip'tois (e -lip 'to -is), n. [Irreg. < Gr. e?Aei-
siphon bein^ completed by means of a more or +
eldoc, form.] In geom., a solid figure all plane vTMo^, elliptic: see elliptic.} curve defined A
less porous intervening connective wall con- sections of which are ellipses or circles
: Axes by the equation ay^-^" bx" (a a;"), where = — m
trasted with Holochoanoida. A. Hyatt, Proo. of an ellipsoid. See axisi.— Central ellipsoid, an el- and n are both greater than 1. Also called in-
lipsoid having its center at the center of mass of a body,
Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., XXII. 260. finite eUipsc Cubic elliptois. See ctiMc.
its axes coincident with the principal axes and propor-
ellipochoanoidal (el'i-po-ko-a-noi'dal), a. tional to the radii of gyration about them.— Ellipsoid Of ellmotlieT (ermuTH'-'er), n. dialectal form of A
Same as ellipochoanoid. expansion. .See strain-ellipsoid, below. — Ellipsoid of eldmother. Brockett. [Prov. Eng.]
ellipse (e-lips'), ». [= D. Sw. ellips =
G. Dan. ^rjTation, an ellipsoid such that the perpendicular from elloopa (e-16'pa), n. Same as illupi. See Bassia.
ellipse = P. ellipse =
Sp. elipse Pg. ellipse = It:; center to any tangent plane is equal to the radius of
=
gyration of a given body about that axis. Ellipsoid of — EUopia (e-lo'pi-ii), n. [NL. (Treitschke, 1825),
It. ellisse, elisse, ellipse, < L. ellipsis, a want,
inertia. Same as ellipsoid of gyration. Ellipsoid Of — < Gr. cATmiI), iAo^', a fish see Elops.} In entom. : :
defect, an ellipse, < Gr. e'Aleifi^, a leaving out, revolution, the surface generated by the rotation of an
ellipse about one of its axes. When the rotation is about
(«) A
genus of geometrid moths, ha'ving a slen-
ellipsis in grammar, a falling short, the conic der body, short, slender, obliquely ascending
the major axis, tlie ellipsoid is prolate ; when about the
section ellipse (see def.), e^.'Xeineiv,< leave in, — palpi whose third joint is conical and minute,
minor, the ellipsoid is oblate. Equlmomental ellip-
leave behind, omit, intr. fall short, < h, in, -I- soid, an ellipsoid whose moments of inertia about all axes and entire delicate wings, of one color and not
);:
i>y«''i Xbe Fleece, i. professed suitors and so she did not want a passionate
Vlmus (which see), mostly large trees, some ;
permission, or former elocation, shall be out of the parents' qui, speak out; cf. eloquium, eloquence, also
disposing. Bp. Hall, Cases of Conscience, iv. 1. a declaration.] A
funeral oration an 61oge. ;
2. Departure from the usual state or mood; [Rare, eulogy, a different word, being used in
displacement ; an ecstasy. its stead.]
In all poesy . there must be ... an elocation and
. .
In the centre, or midst of the pegme, there was an aback,
emotion of the mind. Fotherby, Atheomastix, p. 30. or 8(iuare, wherein this elogy was written.
B. Jonson, King James's Coronation Entertainment.
elocnlar (e-lok'u-lar), a. [< L. e, out, loeu- +
lus, a compartment, a Itttte place, dim. of locus, Elohim
(el'o-him), n.pl. [Heb. 'Elohim, pi. of
a place see loculus, locus.] In hot, not par- 'Eloah : Bee Allah.] One of the names of Qod,
:
L. elocutio(n-), a speaking out, utterance, esp. of excellence: others as an indication of an earlier poly-
mierosaX with thick plates of cork on the branches, is rhetorical utterance, elocution, < cloqui, pp. elo- theistic belief still others as an embodiment of the He- :
probably only a variety. The Scotch elm, or witch-elni, cutua, speak oat, utter, < e, out, loqui, speak.+ brew faith that the powers represented by the gods of the
V, maniana, is a smaller tr«e than the English elm. The heathen were all included in one Divine Person.
Cf. eloquence.'] 1. The manner of speaking in
American species are distinguished as the American elm, Elohism (el'6-hizm), n. l< Eloh(im) -ism.] +
white elm, or water-elm, U. Avteriettna ; the cedar-elm of public; the art of correct delivery in speakingor Worship of G(od as Elohim.
Texas, U. eratti/olia : the cork-, cIUI-, hickory-, swamp-, or reading; the art which teaches the proper use
It was the task of the great prophets to eliminate the
ruckelm, C nuemota ; the red elm, BUpper7-«lm,or mooie- of the voice, gesture, etc., in public speaking.
distinctive religion of Jahveh, and to bring Israel
. .
elm. r, jfulva, the inner bark of which is mncUaginons, .
Elocution, which anciently embraced style and the back to the primitive Elohism. of the patriarchs.
and Is used in medicine and the winged elm, or wahoo,
;
whole art of rhetoric, now signifles manner of delivery, Edinburgh Rev., CXLV. 602.
U. aiata, with corky-winged bimncbea. In Australia the
name is given to the AphanantlU PUHpptnemit, a ape- whether of our own thoughts or those of others. Elohist (el'o-hist), n. [< Eloh(im) -ist] + A
dee allied to the true elm. In the Weat Indies Cordta E. Porter.
title given to the supposed writer (a unity of
0*ruMeaiUJua and C, ffenueautkoide$, of the order Bora- 2t. Eloquence in style or delivery; effective
aimaeuB, leeelre the name, ai also the ruhiaceous Home- authorship being assumed) of the Elohistic pas-
expression.
tut vaUrieomt. The wood i* the toughest of European utterance or sages of the Pentateuch, in contradistinction to
woods and Is cxmsldered to bear the drirlng of bolts and As I have endeavoured to adorn It with noble thoughts, Jehovist.
nails better than any other. It is very durable under BO much more to express those thoughts with elocution.
water, and is frequently used for keels of ships, for boat- Dryden. The descriptions of the Elohist are regular, orderly,
building, and for many structures exposed to wet, or Graceful to the senate Godfrey rose, clear, simple, inartificial, calm, free from the rhetorical
wh.-n great itrength Is re(|uire<l. Beotose of its tough- And deep the stream of elocution flows. and poeticaL Davidson. .S^.
ness, it is used for naves of wheels, shells for tackle- Brooke, tr. of Tasso's Jerusalem Delivered, I. It no longer seems worth while to write puerile essays
blocks, and common turnery. Witch-elm Is much used to show that the Elohist was versed in all the conclusions
by coach-makers, and by shipbuilders for making Jolly- 3. Speech the power or act of speaking.
;
of modern geology. .IV. A. Rev., CXXVII. 334.
boats. Bock-elm Is much used in boat-building, and to Whose taste gave elocution to the mute.
some extent for bows.
. . .
+
Elmidae (el'rai-de), n. pi. [NL., < Elmix -ida.] elocutionist (el-o-kii'shgn-ist), n. [< elocution trans. To separate and remove to a distance.
.\ family of clavicom Coleoptera, taking name + -i.ft.] A
person versed in the art of elocu- From worldly cares himselfe he did eslojrne.
from the genus Elmis : now called Pamida tion one who teaches or writes upon elocu-
; Spenser, F. Q., I. iv. 20.
(which see). tion, or who gives public elocutionary readings Eloiqne, sequester, and divorce her, from your bed and
elmin, a. See ttmen. or exercises. your ttoard. Chapman, All Fools, It. 1.
;
gus, long: see toii/i. Ct. eloin.'] 1. To elon- Love and elope, as modern ladies do.
Shak., T. of the 8., ii. 1.
Cawthom, Nobility.
gate; lengthen out. =Syn. 1. Elocution, Rhetoric, etc. See oratory.
Southey writes to his daughter Edith in 1824, "All the
Ne puUe it not, but goodly plaine elonge, maids eloped because I had turned a man out of the kitch- eloquent (el'o-kwent), a. [= F. Eloquent Pr. =
Ne pitche it not to sore into the vale,
Kor breke douu aboute a dale.
not all
en at eleven o'clock on the preceding night." eloquen Sp. elocuente =
Pg. It. eloquente, < =
it Lowell, Among my Books, 1st ser., p. 265. L. eloquen(t-)s, speaking, having the faculty of
Palladium, Husbondrie (E. E. T. S.), p. 4.
2. To put far off retard.
elopement (e-16p'ment), n. [< elope + -ment.] speech, eloquent, ppr. of eloqui, speak out, <
;
A running away; an escape; private or unli- e, out, +
loqui, speak.] 1. Having the power
By sea, and hills elonged from thy sight, censed departure from the place or station to of expressing strong emotions in vivid and ap-
Thy wonted grace reducing to my mind,
Instead of sleep thus I occupy the night. which one is bound by duty or law specifical- : propriate speech; able to utter moving thoughts
Wyatt, The Lover Prayeth Venus. ly applied to the running away of a woman, or words: as, an eloquent orator or preacher;
Upon the roof the bird of sorrow sat, married or unmarried, with a lover. an eloquent tongue.
BUniging ioyf ul day with her sad note. The negligent husband, trusting to the efficacy of his And for to loken ouermore,
Q. Fletcher, Christ's Triumph, ii. 24.
principle, was undone by his wife's elopement from him. Next of science the seconde
Is Rhetoric, whose faconde
elongate (e-16ng'gat), v. ;
pret. and pp. elon- Arbuthnot.
Aboue all other is eloquent.
gated, p^v.' elongating. [< LL. elongatus, pp. of Her imprudent elopement from her father. Graves.
Gower, Conf. Amant., vll.
elongate: see eiong.] I. trans. 1. To make long But in case of elopement the law allows her no ali- . . .
Lucullus was very eloquent, well spoken, and excellent-
or longer; lengthen; extend, stretch, or draw mony. Blackstone, Com., II. xv.
ly well learned in the Greek and Latin tongues.
out in length : as, to elongate a rope by splicing. eloper (f-lo'pfer), n. One who elopes. North, tr. of Plutarch, p. 421.
'Nothing less, believe me, shall ever urge my consent to She was the most eloquent of her age, and cunning in
Here the spire turns round a very elongated axis.
wound the chaste propriety of your character, by making all languages. B. Jonson, Masque of Queens.
W. B. Carpenter, Micros., § 465.
you an eloper with a duellist. Miss Bvmey, Cecilia, ii. Till the sad breaking of that Parliament
2t. To remove further off.
Broke him, as that dishonest victory
The first star of Aries in the time of Meton the Athenian Elopes (el'o-pez), n. pi. [NL., pi. of Mops.] A At Chffironea, fatal to liberty,
was placed in the intersection, which is now elongated and group of malacopterygian fishes: same as the Kill'd with report that old man eloquent.
removed eastward twenty-eight degrees. family Elopidoe. Milton, Sonnets, v.
Sir T. Broume, Vulg. Err., iv. 13. [NL. (Hiibner,
Elopmlset n. pi.
(e-lof'i-le), 2. Expressing strong emotions with fluency
H. intrans. To recede move to a greater ; 1816), prop. Helophila, < Gr. eAof, pains, a marsh,
and power; movingly uttered or expressed;
distance ; particularly, to recede apparently -t- 0iAo?, icving.] group of pyralid moths. A
stirring; persuasive: as, an eloquent address;
from the sun, as a planet in its orbit. [Rare.] elopian (e-16'pi-an), n. fish of the family A
eloquent history; an eloquent appeal to a jury.
elongate (e-16ng'gat), a. [< LL. elongatus, pp.: Elopida. Sir J. Bichardson. Doubtlesse that indeed according to art is most eloquent
see the verb.] Lengthened; extended or pro- Elopidae (e-lop'i-de), n. pi. [NL., < Elops + which returnes and approaches neerest to nature from
duced; attenuated; specifically, in eool. and -idee.] A
family of clupeiform isospondylous whence it came. Milton, Apology for Smectynmuus.
hot., disproportionately or comparatively long fishes, resembling herrings, but much larger. Burke, though he had long and deeply disliked Chat-
or extended: as, a worm has an elongate body; They have a completed lateral line and a flat membrane- ham, combined with Fox in paying an eloquent tribute to
his memory. Lecky, Eng. in 18th Cent., xiv.
a proboscis is an elongate snout; elongate an- bone between the branches of the lower jaw. Tliey have
cycloid scales, naked head, and terminal moutli, l)ounded
tennae are about as long as the body of an in- on the sides by the supramaxillaries, which are conii>osed 3. Manifesting or exciting emotion, feeling, or
sect; elongate elytra extend beyond the abdo- of three elements. The species are very few, though wide- interest through any of the senses movingly ;
men an elongate flower-stem. ly distributed in tropical and subtropical seas, sometimes expressive or affecting: as, eloquent looks or
;
elongation (e-16ng-ga'shon), n. [< ME. elonga- entering fresh water. They belong to the genera Flops gestures a hush of eloquent silence. ;
ing distance from him. Bp. Hall, Remains, p. 89. and big-eyed herring, is a widely diffused species in both (in oomp. ele-land, another land, elelende, of
Concerning the nature or proper effects of this spot or
the Atlantic and the Pacific. another land, etc.) Goth, alts (gen. aljis) L. = =
elOQUence (el'o-kwens), n. [< ME. eloquence, alius Gr. dX/lof, other. Cf. L. alias, prob. an =
stain [upon the soul], they have not been agreed some
call it an obligation or a guilt of punishment. Some < OF. eloquence, F.'^loquence
:
Pr. eloquencia, =
old gen., at another time, otherwise: see alias,
=
. .
= =
.
fancy it to be an elongation from God, by dissimilitude of eloquensa Sp. elocuencia Pg. eloquencia &ndct.alien,allo-,ete.] If. In another or a dif-
conditions. Jer. Taylor, Works (ed. 183B), I. 723. It. eloquenzia (obs.), eloquenza, < L. eloquentia,
ferent manner; in some other way to a differ- ;
elongation of Venus or Mercury. (6) The an- from or expressing strong emotion in a manner were different; otherwise.
gular distance of a satellite from its primary. to excite corresponding emotion in others by Take yee hede, lest ye don your rigtwisnesse before men,
;
— 6. In surg.: (o) A that yee be sen of hem, ellis [authorized version, otherwise]
partial dislocation, occa- extension, the power or quality of exciting ye shule nat hau mede at youre fadir.
sioned by the stretohing or lengthening of the emotion, sympathy, or interest in any way as. Wyclif, Mat. vi. 1 (Oxf.).
:
; : ; ;: ! ;
Thou didst prevent me ; I had peopled else eltchi, n. See elcki. secrets that elude the keenest search.
Shak., Tempest,
Thia isle with Calibans. i. 2.
eltht, «. An obsolete variant of eld. On this subject Provideuce has thouRht fit to elude our
Shift for yourselves ; ye are lost el»e.
elucidate (f-lu'si-dat), v. t.: pret. and pp. elu- curiosity. QoldstnUh, Vicar, xxix.
Fletcher, Valentinian, v. 2.
cidated, ppr. elucidating. [< LL. elucidatus, pp. One element must forever elude its researches ; and that
Cloagh must have been a rare and lovable spirit, else he
of elucidare (> Sp. Pg. elucidar F. ilucider), = is the very element by which poetry is poetry.
could never have so wrapped himself within the affections + Macaulay, Dryden.
of true men. Stedman, Vict. Poets, p. 244. make light or clear, < L. e, out, lucidus, light,
His mind was quick, versatile, and imaginative few as-
sovereign and serene capacity to fathom the else un-
clear : see Ixicid.} To make clear or manifest
pects of a subject eluded it. Edinburgh Rev.
;
A
fathomable depths of spiritual nature, to solve its else in- throw light upon; explain; render intelligible
The secret and the mystery
soluble riddles, to reconcile its else irreconcilable discrep- illustrate as, an experiment may elucidate a
:
Swinburne, Shakespeare, p. 76.
Have batfled and eluded me.
ancies. theory. Longfellow, Golden Legend, i., ProL
3. Besides; other than the person, thing, place, at once adorn and elucidate the rea- The illustrations
=Syn. To shun, flee, shirk, dodge, baffle, foil, frustrate.
etc., mentioned: after an interrogative or in- soning. Macaulay, Dryden.
eluoible (e-lu'di-bl), a. [< elude -»6fe.] Ca- +
definite pronoun, pronominal adjective, or ad- Though several of them proffered a vast deal of infor- pable of being eluded or escaped.
what, where, anybody, anything, mation, little or none of it had much to do with the mat-
verb {who, etc., If this blessed part of our law be etudible at pleasure,
ter to be elucidated. J. Hawthorne, Dust, p. 239,
somebody, something, nobody, nothing, all, little, ... we shall have little reason to boast of our advantage
etc.), as a quasi-adjective, equivalent to other:
= 83^. Expound, etc. (see explain^; to unfold, clear up. in this particular over other states or kingdoms in Europe.
" '" -----
who else is coming f vhat else shall I give elucidation (e-lu-si-da'shon), n. \='F [= F. elueida- Sujift, Drapier's Letters, vii.
- < .
I,
-sin), n. [E. dial., 8c. also planatory. An appendix relating to the transmutation of metals
elsen, elsin (el'sen, detects the impostures and elusioTis of those who have pre-
eiioH. (hhin, el»yn,< OD. elsene, aelsene, mod.D. .^uch a set of documents may hope to be elucidative in
tended to it.
Cartyle, Oomwell, I. 10.
various respects.
els, < (perhaps through OHG. alansa, ahoMa,, ,x_ ,. i •
IToodM'arii, Essay towards a Nat. Hist, of the Karth.
'alasna (> UE. alesna, > It. lesina =
8p. letna, elucidator (e-lu'si-da-tor), n. One who eluoi elusive (e-lu'siv), a. [< L. elunus, pp. of elu-
alesna =
Pr. alena =
OF. alesne, F. aUne), an dates or explains ; an expositor, dere, elucfe, -«'«.] Eluding, or having a ten- +
awl) OHG. ala, MHG. ale, O. ahle, etc., AS. =
Obscurity is brought over them by the course of igno- dency to elude hard to grasp or confine ; slip- ;
al, eal, eel, awul, E. avl : see a«c<.] An awl. rance and age, and yet more by their pedantical elucida-
Abbot. pery.
tors.
Nor hinds wi' elson and hemp llngle. Hurl'd on the crags, behold they giap, they bleed
Sit soleing shoon out o'er the inale. elucidatory (e-ln'si-da-to-ri), a. [< elucidate + And, groaning, cling upon th' elusive weed.
Aonusy, Poems, II. 2U3. -ury.] Tending to elucidate. [Rare.] Falconer, Shipwreck, liL
elsewards (els'wSrdz), adr. [< else -wards.'] One word alone +
issued from his lips, elucidatory of what Piety is too subtile and elttsive to be drawn into and con-
Alcott, Table-Talk, p. 102.
To another place in another clireetion. [Rare.] was passing in his mind. Barham, Ingoldsby Legends, 1. 95. fined in definitions.
;'
But these earthly sufferers (the punctual) know that elUCtatet (e-luk'tat), V. i. [< L. eluctatus, pp. The moon was full, and snowed down the mellowest light
which in their soft, elusive outlines,
they are making their way heavenwards, and their oppres-
.... out, < e, out,
^f eluetari, struggle luctari, on the gray
—
domes, +
and strange effect of far-withdrawal, rhymed like (aiut-
soni (the unpunctuall their way e/»ei«ir(f«.
struggle. CLlttclation, reluct.] To burst forth heard refrains to the bright and vivid arches of the facade.
TroUope, Autobiography (1883X p. 293.
escape with a struggle. Uowells, Venetian Life, xviii.
elaewliatt (els'hwot), n. [< iiE.'eUestiihat, eOes-
They did eluetaU out of their injuries with credit to elusively (e-lu'siv-li), adi'. With or by elusion,
hiciit, < AS. eUes htctet, something else: eOes,
See ebe and what,
themselves. Bp. Haekel, Abp. Williams, 1. 36.
elusiveneSS (e-lii'siv-nes), n. The quality of
else; hwtet, indef., what.
(e-luk-ta'shon), n. l< JAj. elucta- being elusive; tendency to elude.
and cf. somewhat.'] Something or anything eluctatlont
lio(n-), < L. eiwturi, struggle out: aeeetuctate.] Moreover, we had Miss Peggy, with her banjo and her
else ; other things. with briKht eyes, and her malice and her mocking wlll-o-the-
The act of bursting forth, or of escaping r
When talking of the dainty fleib and etsnekat they eate. a struiCKle. u e>
= ^ .^^^ elurivenest ol mood.
<
W. Black, Houseboat, x.
Warner, Albioo'i EngUnd, 1W2.
Ye do ... sue to Ood .. for our happy eluctatimi elUSOriueSS (e-lu'so-ri-nes), n. The state or
elaewhent (eU'hwen), adv. [< UE. eUeiwhen ; < .lut of those miseries. Bp. Hail, Invisible World, ii. 8 7. quality of being elusory.
.
(on yn rountrey. State Papers, III. 662. Without this the work of God had perished, and reli-
Same as lucubrate.
gion itself had been elusory.
elsewhere (els'hwSr), adv. [< ME. eUethwer, Just as, when grooms tie up and dress a steed. Jer. Taylor, Rule of (^nscience. III. vi. § 1.
elleshwar, < AS. eUes hwoer, elles hwar: ettes, else; Boys lounge and look on, and elucubrate
Aif*r, indef., where.] In another place or in What the round brush is used for, what the square. elute (e-liit'), V. t. pret. and pp. eluted, ppr. ;
MMon, Eikouoklastes, xii. Kever. Evelyn, To Dr. Beale, Aug., 168S. washing out A
washing, '< L. eluere, wash off. ]
waive lost so nioch oare ol oraelrea as we
We mav -i^^g » «.;
Tkmtau, Walden, p. 13. elude (e-lud'), V. '•
'"f»*V? vY-'l" /;, .. 2; i"
pret. ana
and rt eiuaea,
_ _ pp.
eluded, ppr.
i-r any process by which bodies are separated by
buneatlj bestow eUevhere.
eluding'. =
[= P. flutter Sp. Pg. eludir It.
_. .'
elu- =
the action ota solvent ; specifically, a process of
The Persian sword, formidable eUewhere, was not adapt-
ed to do grmd service against the bronze armor and the dere, i L. eludere, finish play, win at play, elude recovering sugar from molasses, which consists
spear of the Hellenes. or parry a blow, frustrate, deceive, mock, < e, in precipitating the sugar as sucrate of lime,
yon Ranke, Univ. HUt. (trans.), p. 187. out, -t- Itidere, play: see ludicrous. Cf. allude, insoluble in cold water, and washing it free
elsewhither (els'hwiTH'^r), adv. [Early mod. collude, delude, illude.] 1. To avoid by artifice, from soluble impurities. The sucrate is decomposed
E. also elswhither ; < ME. 'elleswhider, elles- stratagem, deceit, or dexterity escape evade ; by carljonic acid, which precipitates the lime as carbonate.
;
and copper lodes. The elvans— or elvan-courses, as (neut. of ij'^Ataio^, Elysian), in 'lllhaiov TreSlov, as imng-covers or winy-sheaths. They are elevated during
they are fretiuently called —
have almost identieally the later in pi. 'RAvaia Trcdia, the Elysian Field, or flight, but do not serve as wings. See cuts under Coleop-
same ultimate chemical and mineralogieal composition as tera and beetle.
the pranites of Cornwall, but differ considerably from them Fields, 1. e., the field of the departed, lit. of 2. In some cheetopodous annelids, as the Aphro-
in the mode of aggregation of their constituents. They going or coming, < i/z^vaic, var. of elsvaig, a ^oing ditidw, or polychsetous annelids, as the Poly-
vary in width from a few feet to several fathoms; tliey or coming, advent, < i/^evaeaBai, future, c?Jiciv
traverse alilce granit«s and slates, but are more nuniei-ous
noe, one of the squamous lamella? overlying
(ind. ip.vdov, ij'ABov), 2d aor., go, come (associ- one another on the dorsal surface of the worm,
in the vicinity of the granites than they are elsewhere.
Many elvans have been worked for the tin ore which they ated with ep;ffCTOai, go, come), whence alsoprob. made by a modification of the
sometimes contain. The rock of which elvans are made iTxiSepo^, free.] In G^r. myth., the abode of the dorsal cirri of the parapodia,
up when occurring in loose fragments is also called elvan blessed after death. Also called the Elysian
or elvati-rock. of which they are thus special-
elvanite (el'van-it), w. [< elvan^ -ite^.] The + Fields. It is placed by Homer on the western border of
the earth by Hesiod and Pindar in the Islands of tlie Blest;
;
ized appendages Auriculate,
bispinose, connate, dimidiate,
—
name given by some lithologists to the variety by later poets in the nether world. It was conceived of etc., See tlie adjectives.
el3^ra.
of rook of which the Cornish elvans are made up as a place of perfect delight. In modern literature Ely-
sium is often used for any place of e.\quisite happiness, and Elze'vlr (el'ze-ver), a. and n.
nearly equivalent to quartz-porphyrij and gra- [F. Elzevir, formerly also El-
as synonymous (without religious reference) to Heaven.
nitic porphyru.
sevier, D. Elsevier.] I. a. 1.
Elvellaceae, Elvellacei (el-ve-la'se-e, -i), n. Once more, farewell go, find Elysium,
!
There where the happy souls are crown'd with blessings. Of or belonging to the Elze-
[NL.] Same as Melvellaeew, Melvellacei. Fletcher, Valentinian, iii. 1. vir family ofDutch printers.
f)l.
ven (el' ven), n. [A dial, corruption of elmen.]
An elm. [Prov. Eng.] The flowery-kirtled Naiades . . . —
See below. 2. Noting a cut
Who, as they sung, would take the prison'd soul. of printing-type. See II., 2.
elver (el'v^r), n. [A dial, corruption of eelfare, And lap it in Elysium. Milton, Conms, 1. 257. — Elzevir editions, editions of the
q. v.] A young eel; especially, a young con- And, oh ! if there be an Elysium, on earth,
Latin, French, and German classics, Elytnini of FolynoF.
a polychsetous annelid,
ger- or sea-eel. [Local, Eng.] It is this, it is this.
and other works, published by a bearing fimbriae, view-
family of Dutch printers named El- ed from above (highly
elver-caket (el'ver-kak), n. Eel-cake. Moore, Light of the Harem.
zevir (Elsevier) at Leyden and Am- magnified).
These elver-cakes they dispose of at Bath and Bristol An Elysium more pure and bright than that of the sterdam, chiefly between 1583 and
and when they are fried and eaten with butter, nothing Greeks. Is. Taylor. 1680. These editions are highly prized for their accuracy
can be more delicious. and the elegance of their type, printing, and general make-
Defoe, Tour through Great Britain, II. 306. elytra, «. Plural of elytrum. up. Those most esteemed are of small size, 24mo, 16mo,
elytra! (el'i-tral), a. [< elytrum -al] Of or + and 12mo.
elves, n. Plural of elf. pertaining to the elytra : as, elytral striee ; ely- II. n. 1. A
book printed by one of the Elze-
elvine,
the eel.
«. [E. dial.
[Local, Eng.]
; cf. elver.] The young of tral sulci —
Elytral ligula, a tongue-like process on vir family. —
2. A
form of old-style printing-
the inner face of the side margins of the elytrum, serving type, with firm hair-lines and stubby serifs,
elvish, elvishly. See elfish, elfishly. to hold it more securely to the abdomen in repose, found largely used by the Elzevirs of the seventeenth
elwand, ». See ellwand. in certain aquatic beetles. Eljrtral plica or fold, alongi- — century.
ridge on the interior surface of each elytrum, near
Elymnias (e-lim'ni-as), n. [NL. (Hiibner, tudinal
the outer margin. In repose it embraces the upper surface Elzeviran, Elzevirian (el-ze-ve'ran, -ri-an), n.
1816), irreg. < Gr. e'Av/zoc, a case; cf. elytrum.] of tlie abdomen. [< Elzevir +
-an, -ian.] A
collector or fancier
A genua of butterflies, giving name to the sub- elytriform (e-lit'ri-f6rm), a. [< NL. elytrum, of Elzevir books. See extract under grangerite.
family Elymniinw. E. lais is the type-species, elytrum, + L. forma, shape.] Having the form " Early-English dramatist," or an Elzevirian.
and there are three others, all of the old world.
An
or character of an elytrum elytroid. ;
New Princeton Rev., V. 275.
Eljnnniiliae (e-lim-ni-i'ne), n.pl. [NL., < Elym- elytrlgerous (el-i-trij'e-rus), a. [< NL. ely-
nias + -iiuE.] A
subfamily of old-world nym- trum, elytrum, + L. gerere, carry, + -ous.] Hav-
em^ (em), n. [ME. *em, < AS. em, < L. em, the
phalid butterflies, of one genus (Elymnias) and ing elytra, or bearing an elytrum.
name of the letter M, < e, the usual assistant
several species, having no ocelli, the wings vowel, -1- m ; a Latin formation, the Gr. name
The order of arrangement of the elytriyerous and cir- being /iv.] 1. The name of the thirteenth let-
greatly produced at the apex and their under rigerous somites [of Polynoe] is very curious.
surface peculiarly marked. Many of them re- ter of the alphabet, usually written simply m
semble the DanaituE in general aspect.
Huxley, Anat. Invert., p. 206.
or M. —
2. In printing, the squar e of any size
elytrine (el'i-trin), n. [< elytrum + -ine^.] The
Elymus (el'i-mus), n. [NL., < Gr. eXv/iog, a substance of which the horny covering of cole-
of type. The large square here shown ^H is the em of
kmd of grain, panic or millet.] genus of A opterous insects is composed. the size pica the small one ^, one foura^he size (one
;
coarse perennial grasses, of northern temper- half the height and breadth), la the em of the size non-
elytritis (el-i-tn'tis), n. [NL., < Gr. e^^vrpcv, a pareil, the one here used. 'The em is the unit of mea-
ate regions, allied to Hordeum. There are about sheath (vagina), + -itis.] Colpitis vaginitis. ; surement in calculating the amount of type in a piece of
a dozen species in the United States, some of which serve work, as a page, a column, or a book, the standard of
for hay and pasturage. Commonly known as rye-grass or elytrocele (el'i-tro-sel), n. [< Gr. eAvTpoi>, a
reckoning being 1,000; thus, this page or this Ijook con-
lyme-grass. sheath (vagina), 4- K^Ari, a tumor.] Same as tains so many thousand, or so many thousand and hundred,
Elysia (e-lis'i-a), n. [NL., < Gr. tjlvaio^, Ely- colpocclc. ems. In the United States it is also the unit in calculat-
siau see Elysium.]
: The typical genus of abran- elytro-episiorrhaphy (el"i-tr6-ep"i-si-or'a-fi), ing the amount of work done by a compositor, while the
chiate gastropods n. sheath (vagina), -t- episior-
[< Gr. elvrpov, a en is generally used for that purpose in Great Britain,
of the family rhaphy.] A combination of colporrhaphy with em^, 'em (always unaccented, um), pron. [Usu-
ElysiidiB, hav^ing episiorrhaphy. ally written and printed 'em, in 17th century
"
well - developed Elytrogona (el-i-trog'o-na), n. [NL., < llmpov, often 'hem, being regarded as a " contraction
tentacles and the a case, sheath, elytrum, -I- -ymoq, producing: or abbreviation of them ; but in fact the reg.
sides of the body see -goitous.] A genus of phytophagous beetles, descendant of ME. Acjh, him, hernn, hom, ham,
with wing-Uke of the family Cassidid(B. < AS. him, heom, dat. pi. of he, he, hed, she, hit,
expansions. it, the ME. and AS. dat. becoming the E. obi.
E. Elysta-DiridU. el3rtroid (el'i-troid), a. [< Gr. elvrpociS^^,
vindis, of European, < eAvrpov, a sheath, -1- cUog, form.] Elytriform (aec. and dat.), as in him and her, and the ini-
and E. chlorotica, of American seas, are examples ; they she.ith-like vaginal. tial aspirate falling away as in it, and (in easy
;
resemble slugs, and are found in sea-wrack, eel-grass, etc.
eljrtron, n. See elytrum. speech) in he, his. Mm, her: see he, she, it. But
Elysian (e-liz'ian), a. [= F. elysien, a., My-
sien, n. cf. Sp. eliseo, elisio Pg. elysio It. = = elytroplastic (el"i-tro-plas'tik), a. [As elytro- though this is the origin of em or 'em, the form
jilasty + -ic] could have arisen independently as a reduc-
;
The power I serve And when with hasty noise he spoke '«»,
Laughs at your happy Araby, or the of insects now known as the order Coleoptera. The ignorant for cun-ent took 'em,
Elysian shades. Massinger, Virgin M'artyr, iv. 3. Itwas never current, as the nearly contemporaneous ar- S. Butler, Hudibras, I. i. 109.
In that Elysian age (misnamed of gold). rangement of Illiger, whicli combined the Linnean and
Fabrician systems, and adopted Hay's name Coleoptera, em-^. Assimilated form of fn-1 before labials.
The age of love, and innocence, and joy,
When all were great and free Beattie, Minstrel,
! ii.
came at once into general use. em-2. Assimilated form of c»-2 before labials.
elytroptosis (el'^i-trop-to'sis), n. [NL., < Gr. emaceratet (e-mas'e-rat), V. t. or (. [< L. emace-
Hope's elysian isles. O. W. Holing, Fountain of Youth. EAmpov, a sheath (vagina), + tttImic, a fall, < ratus, defined 'emaciated,' equiv. to emaciatus
Tliere is no Death What seems so is transition
'.
niTTTeiv, fall.] Inpnthol., prolapse of the vagina. (see emaciate), if genuine, a mistaken form for
This life of mortal breath
elytrorrhapliy (el-i-tror'a-fi), n. [< Gr. Iav- "emacraius, e + macer (macr-), lean, whence
<.
Is but the suburb of the life elysian,
Whose portal we call Death. Tpov, a sheath (vagina), -^"l>a(j>ij, a seam, suture, ult. E. meager, q. v.] To make or become lean;
L<mgfellow, Resignation. < frnvretv, sew.] Same as colporrhaphy. emaciate.
— :: : — ";;:
lean, as by disease or pining ; waste away, as Gnostics and Cabalists pushed the doctrine to fantastic to free from civil restriction, or restraint of
developments. any kind; liberate from bondage, subjection, or
flesh.
In the work of the creation we see a double emanation ot controlling power or influence as, to emanci- :
Ue r.Arlstotle] etnaciated and pined away. virtue from God. Bacon, Advancement of Learning, 1, 61.
Sir T. Brounu, Vulg. Err., vii. 14.
pate one from prejudices or error.
3. That which issues, flows, or is given out They emancipated themselves from dependence.
emaciate (e-ma'shi-at), a. [< L. emaciatus, pp. from any substance or body efdux effluvium ; ; Arbuthnot.
see the verK] Thin; wasted; greatly reduced as, the odor of a flower is an emanation of its No man can quite emancipate himself from his age and
in flesh. [Poetical.] particles. country. Emerson, Essays, 1st ser,, p. 319.
Or groom invade me with defying front Justice the brightest ernanatwn from the gospel.
is = Syjl. Emancipate, Manumit, Enfranchise, Liberate, dis-
And stem demeanour, whoBe emaciate steeds . . .
Sydney Smith.
Had panted oft beneath my
goring steel. .
enthrall, release, unfetter, unshackle. To manumit is
T, WartQti, Panegyric on Oxford Ale. 4. In alg., the process of obtaining the succes- the act of an individual formally freeing a slave ; the
sive emanants of a quantic. word has no figurative uses. To emancipate is to free
emaciation (e-ma-shi-a'shon), n. [= F. imaci- Regnault's chemical principle of substitution and the al-
from a literal or a figurative slavery : as, the slaves in
ati'iii = 8p. emaciacion ="tg. emacia^So = It.
the West Indies were emancipated; to emancipate tile
gebraical one of emanation are identical. J. J. Sylvester. mind. To enfranchise is to bring into freedom or into
emacia^ione ; < L. as if 'emaciatio(n-), < emaci- civil rights ; hence the word often refers to the lifting of
Facients of emanation, the facients x', y', etc., referred
are, pp. enuteiatus, make lean : see emaciate.'] in (-'ayley's detinition of an emanant.
t«.» a slave into full civil equality with freemen. Liberate is
1. The act of making lean or tbin in flesh. 2. emanationism (em-a-na'shon-izm), a general word for setting or making free, whether from
ema- n. [<
slavery, from confinement, or from real or figurative op.
The state of becoming thin by gradual wasting nation + -ism.] Devotion to theories of ema- pressions, as fears, doubts, etc.
of flesh ; the state of being reduced to leanness. nation.
Thought emancipated itself from expression without
Searchers cannot tell whether this etnaeiation or lean- It [superstition] settled very thickly again in the first becoming its tyrant.
ness were from a phthisis, or from an hectick fever. Christian centuries, as cabalism, emanationism, neo-pla- Lowell, Among ray Books, 2d ser,, p, 326.
Qraunl, Bills of Mortality. tonism, etc., with their hierarcliies of spirit-host^.
G. S. Hall, German Culture, p, 315, All slaves that had been taken from the northern shore
Marked by the emaxiatum of abstinence. Scott. of the Gulf of Mexico were to be manumitted and re-
«ma(ralatet (e-mak'u-lat), v. t. [< L. emacula- emanatist (em'a-na-tist), n. and a. [< emanate stored to their country. Bancroft, Hist. U, S,, I. 52.
of the North. The Atlantic, LVIL 22. emasculated, ppr. emasculating. [< LL. emascu- foration of this membrane by the tail. There is generally
a single pair of upper incisors. The family is nearly cos-
A woman the most averse to any emancipatory ideas con- latus, pp. of emasculare, < e, out, + masculus, mopolitan, and is divided into EmballonurincB and Molos-
cerning her sex can surely identify her name with that male: see masculine, male^.'] I, trans. 1. To sinte.
most sexly of occupations, needlework. deprive of the male functions ; deprive of vi- Emballonurinse (em-bal '''o-nu-n'ne), n. pi.
Philadelphia Times, July 24, 1883.
rility or proereative power; castrate; geld. [NL., < Emballonura + -in<B.] The subfamily '
who has been pardoned or emancipated. Luxury had not emasciUated their minds.
There is much jealousy between the children of the rich V. Knox, Spirit of Despotism, § 2.
emanc\pi»t |in New South
Wales] and the free settlers.
Darwin, Voyage of Beagle, II. 231. The tastes and habits of civilization, the innumerable
inventions designed to promote comfort and diminish
For some time past the free colonists (in the French pain, set the cuiTcnt of society in a direction altogether
penal colonies], by no means a numerous class, have de- different from heroism, and somewhat enuisculate, though
clined to employ emancipists, declaring that while they they refine and soften, the character.
claimed the free man's wages they would not give the free Lecky, Europ. Morals, I. 136.
man's work. Nineteenth Century, XXI. 839.
3. In general, to weaken; destroy the force or
emandibulate (e-man-dib'u-lat), a. [< L. e- strength of ; specifically, to weaken or destroy
priv. + mandibula, mandible see mandihulate.'\ :
the literary force of, as a book or other writing,
1. In entom., having no mandibles, or having
by too rigid an expurgation, or by injudicious
those organs so modified that they cannot be editing.
used for grasping or biting, as in the Lepidoptera
McGlashan pruned freely. James abused McGlashan for
and most Diptera. This epithet was restricted by having emasculated his jokes. N. and Q., 7th ser., VI. 111.
Kirby to species of the neuropterous faLjaily Phry^aneidce,
in which the mandibles are soft and very minute, but the II. intrans. To become unmanned or effem- Diclidttrus albus, belonging to the subfamily Emballonurina.
maxillffi and labium are well developed, inate.
2. Having no lower jaw, as the lampreys and Though very few, or rather none which have emascu-
the interfemoral membrane above or ends in
hags cyelostomous, as a vertebrate.
; lated or turned women, yet very many who from an es- weak upper incisors, and long legs with slen-
it,
emanet (e-man'), v. i. [= P. emaner Sp. Pg. = teem or reality of being women have infallibly proved der flbulse. The leading genera are Furia, Em-
emanar =
It. emanate, < L. emanare, flow out,
men. Sir T. Browne, Vulg. Err., iii. 17. ballonura, Diclidurus, Noctilio, and Bhinopoma.
proceed from see emanate.'] To flow out : emasculate (f-mas'ku-lat), a. [< L. emascula- emballonurine (em-bal-6-nu'rin), a. and H.
issue ; emanate. tus, pp.: see the verlj.] Deprived of the male I. a. Of or pertaining to tie microchiropteran
We may seem even to hear the supreme intelligence and functions; castrated; hence, unmanned ; de- families Emballonuridce and I'hyllostomidee. The
eternal soul of all natui-e give this commission to the spir- prived of vigor. emballonurine alliance is one of two series into which the
its which enianed from him. Microchiroptera are divided, having the upper incisors
Thus the harrast, degenerous, eirmsculate slave is of- approximated and the tail perforating the interfemoi-al
Sir W. Joties, Mystical Poetry of the Persians and Hindus.
fended with a jubilee, a manumission. membrane, or produced beyond it. See vespertilionine..
emangt, prep, and adv. An obsolete form of Hamitwnd, Works, IV. 515.
II. n. A
member of the emballonurine alli-
among. Catholicism restricts " religion" to its priests and other ance ; an emballonurid or phyllostomid.
emarcid (e-mar'sid), a. [Irreg. < L. e- mar- + emasculate orders, and allows the laity no nearness to
God but what comes through their intercession. embalm (em-bam'), V. t. [Formerly also ini-
cidus, withered, after emarcescere, 'wither away balm; spelling altered as in 6«7»( ; < ME. ewfeaic-
//. James, Subs, and Shad., p. 211.
see marcid.'] In bot., flaccid; -wilted. men, enbaumen, < OF. embaumer, earlier embaus-
emargina-te (e-mar'ji-nat), V. t. ; pret. and pp. emasculation(e-mas-ku-la'shon), «. [= p. Emas-
culation; < L. as if *emasculatio{n-), < emasctt- mer, embasmer, embausemer, emhalsemer, etc., F.
emarginated, ppr. emarginating. [< L. emargi-
lare, emasculate: see emasculate.'] 1. The act
embaumer = Pr. emhasmar, embaymar = Sp. Pg.
nuttis, pp. of emarginare, deprive of the edge,
of depriving a male of the functions which embalsamar = It. imbalsamare, imbalsimare, <
< e, out, + margo {margin-), edge, margin: see ML. imbalsamare, < L. in, in, + balsavmm, bal-
marginate.l To remove the margin of; deprive
characterize the sex; castration. —
2. The act
sam, balm: see balsam, balm.] 1. To dress
of depriving of vigor or strength ; specifically,
of margin. or anoint with balm specifically, to preserve
the act of eliminating or altering parts of a ;
or to the gills of fungi, (d) In mineral., having all the some Scotchman's. Qayton, Notes on Don Quixote.
body, remove the viscera, and fill the cavities with anti-
edges of the primi-
3. The state of being emasculated; effemi- septic spices and drugs. (See mummy.) In modern times
tive form truncated,
nacy; unmanly weakness.
each by one face, (c)
many substances and methods have been employed in era.
balming, as by injection of arsenical preparations into the
emasculator (f-mas'ku-la-tor), n. [< L. emas-
In zool., having the
blood-vessels, generally with a view only to the preserva-
margin broken by a culator, < emasculare, emasculate: see emascu-
tion of the body for a certain period, as during transporta-
shallow notch or
other incurvation
late.] One who or that which emasculates. tion to a distant point, or instead of refrigeration in hot
nicked. — emasculatory (f-mas'ku-la-to-ri), a.
incised [< emas- weather during the ordinary interval before burial.
Three Emarginate Primaries of a Hawlc. ;
Emarginate pro- culate -¥ -ory.] Serving to emasculate. ' Joseph commanded his servants the physicians to em.
thorax or pronotum, in entom., one having the anteri(jr embacet, v. t. See embase. balm his father and the physicians embalmed Israel.
:
emarginately (e-mar'ji-nat-li), adv. In the hallare, make into a bale, pack up), < en, in, + Hence — 2. To preserve from neglect or decay
form of iiotenes. 6oie, 6oHe, a bale,ball: see 6«te3j jaMi.] 1. To preserve in memory.
emargination (e-mar-ji-na'shon), n. [< emar- make up into a bale, bundle, or package ;
pack.
Those tears eternal, that embalm the dead.
ginate + -ion.] The act of taking away the All the marchandize they lade outwards, they etnball Pope, Ep, to Jervas, 1. 48.
it well with Oxe hides, so that if it take wet, it can haue
margin, or the state or condition of ha-ving the No longer caring to embalm
no great harme, Hakluyt's Voyages, II. 227. In dying songs a dead regret.
margin taken away.
Specifically (a) In bot., — 2. To wrap up ; inclose. Tennyson, In Memoriam, Conclusion.
the condition of having a Her streight legs most bravely were etnbayid 3. To impart fragrance to ; fill with sweet scent.
notch at the summit or In gilden buskins of costly Cordwayne.
blunt end, as a leaf or Meanwhile,
Spenser, F. Q., II. iii. 27. Leucothea waked, and with fresh dews embalm'd
petal as, the emargina-
:
tion of a leaf. (6) In zool. emballingt (em-ba'ling), n. [Verbal n. of em- The earth. Milton, P. L., xi. 135.
the state of being emargi- ball, taken independently as < tm-^ + ball^ see :
Here eglantine embalmed the air.
nate incision. Scott, L. of the L, 1. 12.
;
embale, emboli.] The act of distinguishing by
Either or both webs [of Leaf of Buxus sempervirens and
feathers] may be incised Flower of Primula sinensis.
the ball or globe, the ensign of royalty promo- ;
embalmer (em-ba'mfer), n. [= p. embaumeur.]
toward the end this is a, d, Emarginations.
; tion to sovereignty. One who embalms bodies for preservation.
called emargination. . . .
Anne. I swear again, I would not be a queen By this it seemeth that the Romans in Numa's time were
The least appreciable forking [of a bird's tail) is called For all the world. not so good embalmers as the Egyptians were.
cmarginatUm, and a tail thus shaped is said to be emar- Old L. In faith, for little England Bacon, Nat. Hist., § 171.
ginate. Cinies, Key to N. A. Birds, pp. 112, 117. You'd venture an emballing. Shak., Hen. VIII., ii. 3.
embalmment (em-bam'ment), n. [= p. em-
emarginato-ezca'vate (e-mar-ji-na'to-eks'ka- Emballonura (em-bal-o-nu'ra), n. [NL., < Gr. baumement; as embalm + -ment.] '1. The act
vat), a. In entom., hollowed out above, the Cfilid?'/.nv, throw in, -t- ovpd, tail.] The typical or process of embalming.
next joint being inserted in the hollow, as a genus of bats of the family Emballonuridce. rhe Lord Jetf cries ordered the hearseman to carry the corpse
tarsal joint. tail perforates the interfenioral membrane and appears to Russell's, an undertaker in Cheapside, and leave it
— ; ; ;
At len^h we found a faire new ilat, and %'nder that two policy make a seizure or arrestment of. See
;
embarmentt (em-bar'ment), n. [< embar +
bundles, the one bi^rger, the other lesse in the greater we ;
embargo, n. -metit] An embargo. MalUxcell.
found a great quantity of fine red powder, lilce a kinde of A
imbaltiument. Capt. John Smith, True Travels, 11. 222. embarguet, ». [< embargo, n.] An embargo. true report of the general embarrement of all English
shlppes. Title of a Tract (1684).
If I die. To make an Embargue of any Stranger's Ship that rides
Like sweet embtUmment round my heart shall lie within his Ports upon all Occasions. embarquementf, «. [Occurring in the follow-
This love, this love, this love I have for thee. Howell, Letters, I. iii. 11. ing passage in Shakspere, where some editions
William Morrig, Earthly Paradise, I. 331.
embarguet (em-barg'), v. t. [Also, less prop., have embarguement ; < OF. embarquement, tak-
embank (em-bangk'), t'. t. [Formerly also im- embarge; embargo, ».] To embargo.
< ing ship, putting into a ship, loading: see em-
bank; em-l + fcanfcl.]
< To inclose with a The know if there were any warres betweene
first, to barkment. Embargo does not appear to have
bank furnish with an embankment defend or
; ; Spaiue and England. The second, why our merchants been in use in any form in Shakspere's time.]
strengtlienby banks, mounds, ordikes; bankup. with their goods were etnbarged or arrested.
Hakluyt's Voyages, III. 555.
A word of uncertain meaning (perhaps a load-
embankment lem-bangk'ment), «. [Formerly
Howsoever, in respect of the king's departure (at which
ing, burdening, restraint) in the following pas-
also imbankment ; < embank + -»(enf.] 1. The sage:
time they use here to embarge all the mules, and means
act of surrounding or defending with a bank. of carriage in this town), I believe his lordship will not The prayers of priests, nor times of sacrifice,
2. A mound, bank, dike, or earthwork raised begin his journey so soon as he intended. Embarquementu [var. embarguements] all of fury.
for any purpose, as to protect land from the Cabbala, Sir Wni. Alston to Sec. Conway. SAo*.,Cor., i. 10.
inroads of the sea or from the overflow of a It was no volunUry but a constrained Act in the Eng- embarras (on-ba-ra'), n. [F.] See embarrass.
lish, who, being in the Persian's Port, were suddenly em-
river, to carry a canal, road, or railway over a embarrass (em-bar'as), v. t. [< F. embarrasser,
bargued (or the Service [for the Uking of Ormus].
valley, etc. ; a levee as, the Thames embank- :
Howell, Letters, I. iii. 11.
encumber, obstruct, block up, entangle, per-
ment in London, England. plex (= Sp. embarazar = Pg. embaragar =
embarguementt, See embarquement.
n.
Once again the tide had rolled fiercely against the em- embark '
im-bark'), [Formerly also embargue
v.
It. imbarazzare, embarrass), < L. in, in, F. +
bankment, and Iforne part of it away. *barras, Pr. barras, a bar ; cf. Sp. barras, a pris-
B. Dowtlen, Shelley, I. 303.
and imbark; < OF. (and F.) embarquer = Sp.
on, prop. pi. of Pr. Sp., etc., 6arro, P. barre, a
embart (em-bar'), V. t. ; pret. and pp. embarred,
Pg. embarear =
It. imbarcare, < L. in, in, + ML.
bar. Cf. embar, embargo, and debarrass, disem-
6arca, a bark: see ftorfcS.] I. trans. 1. To put
ppr. embarring. [Formerly also imbar ; < OF. barrass.] 1. To hamper or impede as with en-
on board a ship or other vessel as, the general :
embarrer, enbarrer, bar, set bars on, bar in, < tanglements; encumber; render intricate or
embarked his troops and their baggage.
en- +
barrer, bar: see rm-l and 6arl.] 1. To
Sidan fled to Safl, and einbarques his two hundred wo-
difficult ; beset with difficulties ; confuse or per-
bar; close or fasten with a bar; make fast. men in a Hemming; his riches, in a Marsilian.
plex, as conflicting circumstances, pecuniary
2. To inclose so as to hinder egress or escape Purchae, Pilgrimage, p. 632. complications, etc. : as, public affairs are em-
bar up or in. We went on to the .South Sea Coast, and there embarked barrassed; want of order tends to embarrass
Fast embard In mighty braaen wall. our selves in such Canoas and Periago's as our Indian business ; the merchant is embarrassed by the
Speneer, F. g., I. viL 44. ftiends (uniished us withal. Dampier, Voyages, I. ill.. Int. unfavorable state of the market, or by his lia-
She [the ship) was by their agreement stolen oat of the The French have embarked Fitz-James's regiment at bilities.
harix>r, where she had been long embarred. Ostend (or .Scotland. Walpole, Letters, II. 5.
I believe our being here will but embarrass the inter-
To stop obstruct
Winthrop, HUt. New England, II. 88.
bar out.
Hence — 2. To place or venture;
put at usa or view. Goldsmith, She Stoops to Conquer, ii.
3. ; ; risk, as by investment ; put or send forth, as Hugo was an indefatigable and versatile writer. The
The first great judgment of Ood npon
the ambition of toward a destination as, he embarked his capi-
: stupendous quantity of work which he produced during
man was the confosion of tongues; whereby the open tal in the scheme. his long literary career is hardly less embarrassing in va-
trade and intercourse of learning and knowledge was I am sorry riety than in amount. Edinburgh Rev., CLXIII. 131.
chiefly imbarred. Bacon, Advancement of Learning, f. 64. I e'er embarked myself in such a business.
B. JoTuon, Alchemist,
2. To perplex mentally confuse the thoughts ;
embarcation, >i. See embarkation. i. 1.
or perceptions of discompose disconcert
embarge^t (em-bSrj'), r. *. [< em-^ + b<irge.'\ 1 suppose thee to be one who hast einbarqu'd many
abash : as,
;
To put or go on board a barge. prayers (or the succease o( the Gospel in these darke cor-
ners o( the earth. yoimg lady.
Triumphall music from the flood arose, T. SKepard, Clear Sunshine of the Gospel, To the Reader.
. As when the soueraigne we embar^d doe see. He well knew that this would embarrass me.
And by faire London (or his pleamre rowea. know not whether he can be called a goml subject who
I Smollett, Humphrey Clinker.
Drayton, Legend of Robert. does not embark some part o( his fortune with the sUte,
to whose vigilance he owes the security of the whole. He [Washington] never appeared embarrassed at homage
embarge^t, r. t. See embargue. rendered him. Bancroft, Hist, Const, II. 364.
Steele, SpecUtor, No. 340.
embargo Oem-bSr'go), ». (^Formerly also im-
n. intrans. 1 To go on board ship,
as when =8yn. 1. To hinder, imi)ede, obstruct, harass, distress,
barqo ; =
D. G. Dan. Sw.ejwoarj/o F. embargo = .
seizure, arrest (= Pg. embargo, embargo, objec- to make it difficult for one to know what is best to be
On the 14 o( September
imbarked in another English
tion, = Pr. embarg, embarc), < embargar (= Pg.
I
done; also, U> confuse or disconcert one so that one has
ship. Sandys, Travaiies, p. 7.
embargar), arrest, restrain, distrain, impede, not for a time one's usual judgment or presence of mind.
In the evening I embarked, and they choose an evening To puzzle, literally, is to pose or give a hard question to,
seize, lay an embargo on, < IiTL. as if 'imharri- (or coolness, rowing ail night to put into a state of uncertainty where decision is difficult
eare, block up, emlwr, < L. in, in, in-2, + ML. Dampier, Voyages, II. 1. 100. orinipo!«sit>le it applies equally to opinion and to conduct.
;
barra, a bar: see 6arl, and cf. barricade, em- Did I but purpose to embark with thee To perplex, literally, is to inclose, as in the meshes of a net,
to entangle one's judgment so that one is at a loss whnt
bar, embarrass.'] 1. A stoppage or seizure of On the smooth Surface of a Summer's Sea?
/*rior, Henry and Emma. to think or how to act. Embarrass expresses most of un*
ships or merchandise by sovereign authority comforUble feeling and mental confusion.
specifically, a restraint or prohibition imposed 2.To set out, as in some course or direction Awkward, embarrassed, stiff, without the skill
by the authorities of a countrj- on merchant make a start or beginning in regard to some- Of moving gracefully or sUnding still.
vessels, or other ships, to prevent their leav- thing; venture; engage. Churchill, The Rosciad.
ing its ports, and sometimes amounting to an Ever embarking in Adventures, yet never comes to Har- Some truth there was, but dash'd and brew'd with lies.
interdiction of commercial intercourse either bour. Congreve, Old Batchelor, i. 4. To please the fools, and puzzle all the wise.
with a particular country or with all countries. He saw that he would be slow to embark in such an un- Dryden, Abs. and Achlt., 1. 115.
The sequestration by a natkm of vessels or goods of its dertaking. Maeattlay, Hist Eng., x. They begin by laws to perplex their commerce with
. , .
own citlxena or sabjecta, (or pabllc nacs, b aometlmes They were most unwilling that he should embark in an infinite regulations, impossible to be remembered and
called a eivU tmbargo, in oontradiiUnction to • general undertaking which they knew would hamper him (or so observed. Franklin, Autobiog., p. 409.
prohililtion from Imring port intended to affect the many years to come. Lad;/ Holland, in Sydney Smith, vil. He perpetually puzzled and perplexed amidst his own
is
trade or nafal operations o( another nation, called inter- blunders. Addison.
natiotutl embargo. embarkation, embarcation (em-bar-ka'shon),
BmbargoeM on merchandise was another engine o( royal «. [= F. embarcation, a boat, craft (= Sp. embarrass (em-bar'as), n. [Also written, as
power, by which the English prince* were able to extort embareacion = Pg. embarcafSo) ; as embark + F.,embarras; < F. embarras Sp. embarazo = =
money (ram the people. Utune, Hist. Eng., V., App. iii. -ation.'] The act of putting or goin^ on board
1. Pg. embarazo =
It. imbarazzo, embarrassment,
An enibargo ... is, in Its special sense, a detention a( ship ; the act of setting out or sending off by obstruction, etc. from the verb. ] ;If. Embar-
vessels in a port, whether they be national or (oreign, water. rassment.
whetlier (or the purpose of employing them and their
'-rews in a naval expedition, as was (ormerly practised, or The embarcation at the army. Clarendon. " Now," says my Lord, "the only and the greatest em-
for political purposes, or by way o( reprisals. Lost again and won back again, it [Salona] appears barras that I have in the world Is, how to behave myself
IToofMy, Introd. to Inter. Law, 1 114. throughout those wars as the chie( point of embarcation to Sir H. Bennet and my Lord Chancellor."
Hence — 2. A restraint or hindrance imposed (or the Imperial armies on their voyages to lUly.
K. A. Freeman, Venice, p. 173.
Pepys, Diary, II. 148.
These little etnbarrasses we men o( intrigue are eternally
on anything: as, to lay an embargo on free subject to. Foote.
-peech. 2. That which is embarked.
Another rmbarco/ion of JesuiU was sent from Lisbon to 2. In the parts of the United States formerly
Her emterpo of silence.
BuskneU, Sermons on Living Subjects, I. 34.
CiviU Vecchia. SmoUett, Hist. Eng., III. xlii. French, a place where the navigation of a river
3. The vessel on which something is embarked. or creek is rendered difficult by the accumula-
The chill embaroo of the snow
Was melted in the genial glow. [Bare.] tion of driftwood, trees, etc.
Whluitr, Snow-Bound. We must have seen something like a hundred of these embarrassingly (em-bar'as-ing-li), adv. In an
Embargo acts, United States statute* forbidding the embarkationt [canal-barges] in the course of that day's pad- embarrassing manner; so as to embarrass.
rl - ' rchant veaaeU from any United .States port dle, ranged one after another like the houses in a street. embarrassment (em-bar'as-ment), n. [< em-
The R. L. Stei^enson, Inland Voyage, p. 100.
i>
r>
n>ecial permission o( the I'resldent.
that o( 1807, amended In 1806 (2 SUt..
is
barrass + 1. Perplexity; intricacy;
-ment.]
4:.i ;iM ,...v)
I
1
|>^ft«d to countervail the Berlin and Milan embarkment (em-bark'ment), n. [Formerly entanglement; involvement, as by debt or un-
decrees of Napoleon 1. and the British orders In council, also imbarkment, embarguement, imbarquement favorable circumstances.
by whleh France and Oreat Britain, then at war. intimated (and embarquement, q. v.); < OF. (and F.) em- The embarrassments to commerce growing out of the
a riglit tii int*Tfert with and control neutral merchant
vesaels, whether carrying articles contraband of war or
barquement (= Pg. embarcamento It. imbarca- = late regulations. Bancro.ft.
not. Similar acU were paaaed in 1812 (2 SUt, 700) and m^«<o),< cw6ar(/!«!r, embark: seeemftarfc.] The Let your method be plain, that your hearers may run
1813 (3 SUt, 88). act of embarking embarkation. ; through it without embarrassment. Watts, Logic,
! ; :
baht, MHG. ambet, ammet, G. amt, service, of- In uectar'd lavers, strew'd with asphodel.
embarrelt (em-bar'el), v. t. [< em-i + harrel.1 fice, charge, magistracy, jurisdiction, district,
Milton, Comus, 1. 837.
To put or pack in a barrel. business, concern, corporation, divine service, embattle^ (em-bat'l), v. ;
and pp. embat-
pret.
Our embarreVd wliite herrings last in long voy- ppr. embattling. [Early mod. E. also em-
mass, etc. (> Dan. Sw. amt, jurisdiction, dis-
. . .
tled,
ages. Xa3he, Lenten Stuffe (Harl. Misc., VI. 179).
+ barren.'] trict: see amt, amtman, ammau), Icel. em- = battail, embatteil; < ME. embatailen, enbatelen,
embarrent (em-bar'en), v. t. [< em-^ Sw. = array for battle, < OP. embataiUier, array for
bcetti, sei-vice, office, divine service,
To make barren sterilize. ;
embete, office, place, corporation, Dan. em- = battle, < en- + bataille, battle: see battle^. A
Lilse the ashes from the Mount Vesuvius, though singly
small and nothing, yet in conjoined quantities they em-
bede, office, place, =
Goth, andbahti, service; different word from embattle"^, but long con-
barren all the fields about it. Feltham, Resolves, ii. 9. whence the verb, AS. (ONorth.) embehtian = fused with it.] I. trans. To prepare or array
Icel. embcetta = Goth, andbahtjan, serve. The for battle; arrange in order of battle.
embasef (em-bas')> enbaissen, <
*'• t- [^ ME. Whan
Teut. word has been taken as the source of the that he was embaiailed.
OF. embaisser, embesser, lower, abase, < en- + L., but the case is prob. the other way^ Goth. He goth and hath the felde assailed.
bag, low, base : see base^. Cf. abase.'] 1. To Qower, Conf. Amant., I. 221.
and-b- standing for L. amb-, which combination
lower; degrade ; depress or hollow out. It was not long
does not occur in Goth., while and-b- is com- Ere on the plaine fast pricking Guyon spide
When God . . .
mon; AS. amb-, omb-, for L. amb-, or accom.
Had seuered the Floods, leuell'd the Fields, One in bright armes einbatteiled full strong.
Etnbai't the Valleys, and embost the Hils. an-b-, on-b-, the reg. reduction of AS. *and-b-, Spenser, F. Q., II. v. 2.
Syleester, tr. of Ui^Bartas's Weeks, i. 3. which is never reduced to amb-, omb-, in native The English are embattled, you French peers.
words (cf. amber^).] Same as embassy. Shak., Hen. V., iv. 2.
2. To lower in value; debase; vitiate; de-
But wlien words embassade forth she sends. Here once the embattled farmers stood.
prave; impair. lier
And fired the shot heard round the world.
Lord, how sweete musicke that unto them lends I
Mixture of falsehood is like alloy In coin of gold and Honour of Beautie.
Emerson, Concord Hymn.
Spenser, In
silver,which may make the metal work the better, but it
embaseth it. Bacon, Truth (ed. 1887). embassador, n. See ambassador. Il.t intrans. To form in order of battle.
They that embafe coin and metals, and obtrude them This Luys hath written 3. large bookes in Spanish col-
We shall embattle
for perfect and natural. Jer. Taylor, Holy Dying, iv. 8. lected .out of Don luan de Baltasar, an Ethiopian of
.
By the second hour i' the morn.
.
Shak., A. and C, iv. 9.
A pleasure high, rational, and angelic a pleasure em- ;
great accompt, who had beene Embassador from his Mas-
bated by no appendant sting. South. ter Alexander. Purchas, Pilgrimage, p. 666. The Regent followed him [the French king], but could
not overtake him till he came near to Senlis There both :
3. To lower In nature, rank, or estimation; embassadorial (em-bas-a-do'ri-al), rt. See am- the Armies encamped and embattelled, yet only some light
degrade. bassadorial. .Skirmislies passed between them. fiaA:€r,Chronicles, p. 183.
They saw that by this means they should somewhat embassadress (em-bas'a-dres), »». See ambas- embattle^ (em-bat'l), pret. and pp. em-
v. t. ;
-ment.'] The act of embasing, or the state of A different word from embattle^, but long con-
Carneades the philosopher came in embassage to Rome. fused with it.] To furnish with battlements;
being embased; a vitiated, impaired, or de- Bacon, Advancement of Learning, i. U.
based condition depravation ; debasement. give the form of battlements to used chiefly :
;
Honour persuaded him [Edward IV.] that it stood him
in the past participle.
Tliere is dross, alloy, and e-nibaseyne-nt in all human much upon to make good tlie Embassage in which he had
tempers. Sir T. Browne, Christ. Mor., t 28. sent the Earl of Warwick, to a great Prince. I saugh a gardeyn. . . .
But when the Erie of Warwik understode of this mar- a message. Fall prone. Cowper, Task, ii. 122.
riage, he tooke it highly that his embanate was deluded. And ever and anone, when none was ware. Spurr'd at heart witli fieriest energy
Sir T. More, Works, p. 90.
With speaking lookes, that close embassage bore. To embattail and to wall about thy cause
embasis (em'ba-sis), n. [LL., < Gr. eiifiaau:, a He rovd at her. Spenser, F. Q., III. Ix. 28. With irou-worded proof.
Tennyson, Sonnet to J. M. K.
bathing-tub, a foot, hoof, step, a going into, < Doth not thy embassage belong to me
ififiaiveiv, go into, < h, in, + (iaiveiv, go.] In And am I last to know it? embattle^ (em-bat'l), In n. [< embattle^, v.]
Shak., Rich. II.,
med., a bathing-tub, or vessel filled with warm
iii. 4.
a merlon, or a single one of the series of
lier.,
water for bathing. Also called embasement. embassy (em'ba-si), n. pi. embassies (-siz). solid projections of a battlement. See cut un-
;
(and see embasiate, ambassiate), < late ME. am- of a public minister, whether ambassador or en- specifically, in her., broken
bassade, ambassiade, ambaxade D. G. Dan. = voy; hence, an important mission of any kind: in square projections and de-
ambassade =
Sw. ambassad, < OF. ambassade, as, he was qualified for the embassy. —
2. A mes- pressions like the merlons
also ambaxade, ambayade, and embassade, F. sage, as that of an ambassador a charge com- and intervals of battlements
;
ambassade, < OSp. ambaxada, mod. Sp. emba- mitted to a messenger. [Archaic] said of one of the lines form-
jada =Pg. embaixada It. ambasciata = Pr. = How many a pretty Embassy have I ing the boundaries of an or-
ambaissat, ambaissada =
OP. ambassee, ambaxee, Receiv'd from them
J. Beaumont, Psyche, ii. 59.
dinary or other bearing also
Aigcnt, a Fesse Embat-
;
ctnbascee (> E. ambassy, embassy, which are re- said of the bearing whose out- tled Gules.
Here, Persian, tell thy embassy. Repeat
lated to ambassade, embassade, as armxfl to line is so broken as, a fesse :
That to obtain thy friendship Asia's prince
armada: see ambassy, embassy), < ML. *am- To me hath proffer'd sov'reignty o'er Greece. embattled. Also battled, erenele, crenelated, cre-
bactiata, spelled variously ambaxiata, ambaxata, Glover, Leonidas, x. nellated. Also written imbattled.
ambasciata, ambassiata, etc., an embassade, em- Such touches are but embassies of love. This Logryn amended gretly the Citee, and made towres
bassy, prop. pp. fem. of "ambactiare, ambaxiare, Tennyson, Gardener's Daughter. and stronge walles enbateiled, and whan he hadde tlms
channged the name and cleped it Logres,
ambasciare, ambassiare, etc., go on a mission, 3. mission, or the person or persons intrust- ame[n]ded it he
A .in breteigne, for that liis name was Logryn.
announce, < "ambactia, ambaxia, ambascia, am- ed with a mission; a legation. Merlin (E. E. T. S.), ii. 147.
bassia (> OF. ambasse), a mission, embassy, Embassy after embassy was sent to Rome by the Cartha- With hesitating step, at last,
charge, office, < L. ambactus, cited by Pestus ginian government. Arnold, Hist. Rome, xiii. Tlie embattled portal-areli he passed.
Scolt, L. of L. M., Int.
from Ennius as a Gallic word meaning servant' '
In 1155, the first year of Henry II. there was an embassy
,
(servus), and applied by Csssar to the vassals from the kings of Norway. Battled embattled. See battled^.— Embattled grady.
Stubbs, Medieval and Modern Hist., p. 124. See (/rad;/.— Embattled molding, in arch., a molding
or retainers (ambactos clientesque) of the Gallic
indented like a battlement.
chiefs ; identified by Zeuss with W. amaeth (for 4. The official residence of an ambassador; the
*ambaeth, orig. type *ambact), a hxisbandmaii, ambassadorial building or buildings.
orig. perhaps a tenant, retainer, or a footman, embastardizet (em-bas'tiir-diz), v. t. [< cw-l
goer about, < W. am, formerly amb- (= L. amb-, + bastardise.] To bastardize. Also written
ambi-, q. v.), around, about, + aeth (pret.), he imbastardise.
went. With the L. ambactus is connected an The rest, imbastardized from the ancient nobleness of
important Teut. word, AS. ambeht, embcht, om- their ancestors, are ready to fall flat.
atten- Milton, Eikonoklastes, Pref. .v j ~i England.
.iLincoln,
biht, onbeht (rare and poet.), a servant, ,j.
, j .. .- i7~.i._.i
' '
Embattled Molding.— .
Cathedral of
dant, =
OS. "ambaht, ambahteo =
OHG. ambaht, embaterion (em-ba-te'ri-on), n. pi. embateria ;
[Pseudo-
ampaht, m., =
Icel. ambott, ambatt (> ME. am- (-a). [< Gr. iufiaTrjptov (sc. //e/of, song), the air embattlement (em-bat'1-ment), n.
boht), fem., =
Goth, andbahts, m., a servant; a to" which soldiers marched, a march (the ana- 8,TQha,ioembattailment,evibatailement; not found
word common in later Teut. only in the deriv. pestio songs of Tyrtreus were so called), neut. in ME.; < embattle^ +
-ment, or rather the same
;:
inclose between capes or promontories land- ; Endeavour a little at the Embellishment of your Stile. ember-eve (em'bfer-ev), ». The vigil of an
lock : as, the ship or fleet is embayed. Steele, Tender Husband, ii. 1. ember-day. See eve^.
We were so imbayed with ice that we were constrained The selection of their ground, and the embellishment It hath been sung, at festivals,
come out as we went in. Hakluyts Voyages, 1. 447. of it. Prescott.
to On einber-eves, and holy-ales.
Ships before whose keels, full long embayed 2. Ornament decoration
; ; anything that adds Shak., Pericles, Prol. to 1.
In polar ice, propitious winds have made beauty or elegance; that which renders any- ember-fast (em'bfer-fast), «. [< MB. (not
Vnlooked-for outlet to an open sea. thing tasteful or pleasing to the sense: as, rich found), < AS. ymbren-fcesten : see ember^ and
Wordmrorth, Eccles. Sonnets, U. 23.
dresses are embeilishments of the person; virtue fasts.] The fast observed during the ember-
To escape the continual shoals in which he fonnd himself is an embellishment of the mind.
embayed, he sUkmI out to sea, Jlancro/t, Hist. U. S., I. 90.
days.
Indeed the critic deserves our pity who cannot see that ember-goose (em'ber-gos), n. [Also (dial.) em-
cmbay^t (em-ba'), V. t. [One of Spenser's man- the formal circumstance of sitting silent seven days was mer-, imber-, immer-, ammer-goose ; cf D. embcr- .
uf iictured forms intended iorembathe, as bay^*^,
; a dramatic embellishment in the Eastern manner.
vogel (D. vogel = E. fowl), G. imber, < Dan. im-
q. v., for 6a<Ae.] bathe ; steep. To Warburton, Divine Legation, vi., notes.
ber, Sw. imber, immer, Norw. imbre, var. ymmer,
Othera did tfaenuelTes embay in liquid joyes. Painting and sculpture are such embellishments as are
hymber, liymbern, Faroie imbrim, Icel. himbrin,
not without their use.
Spenser, F. Q., II. xiL 60.
Then, when he hath both plaid and fed his till.
mod. himbrimi, the ember-goose.] name of
Pococke, Description of the East, II. iL 277. A
In the warme sunne he doth himselfe embay. Wisdom, and discipline, and l!t>eral arts. the great northern diver or loon, Colymbiis tor-
Spenser, Muiopotmos, 1. 206. The embellishments of life. Addison, Cato. qnatus or Urinator immer.
embayed (em-bad'), p. a. [Pp. of embay^, r.] Specifically 3. In music, an ornamental ad- emberingt — (em'bfer-ing), n. [< ember^ -I- -ingri.]
Forming, or formed in, a bay or recess. Also dition to the essential tones of a melody, such An ember-day.
spelled imbayed. as a trill, an appofjgiatura, a turn, eto. ; a grace Fasting days and ejnberinffs be
or decoration. = Sjru. 1 and 2. Adornment, enrichment. Lent, Whitsun, Holyrood, and Lucie. Old rime.,
A superb embayed window.
Lathrop, Spanish Vistas, p. l-tO. embencht (em-bench'), V. t. [< em-1 bench.'] embering-dayst (em'bfer-ing-daz), n. pi. The +
embaylet, r. t. An obsolete spelling of embale. To bank up. ember-days.
embayment (em-ba'ment), n. [< embay^ + Morris-daunce Cerdicus was the first May-Lord or captains of the
that on those embenehed shelves stampt his
Divers of the king's subjects have of late more than in
-iiient.'] A part of the sea closed in and shel- footing. times past broken and contemned such abstinence, which
Sashe, Lenten Stuffe (HarL Misc., VI. 150). hath been used in this realm upon the Fridays and Sat-
tered by capes or promontories. the embering-days, and other days commonly
l*he embayimnt which is terminated by the land of
emberl (em'b^r), n. [Early mod. E. also im- urdays, called vigils. Quoted by Hallam.
North Berwick. Scott. ber,imbre,ymber; < ME. ej«i6re,eymery, usually
pi. emmeres, emeres, north, ammeris, ameris Emberiza
in (em-be-n'zS), n. [NL. (Linnae-
embeamt (em-bem'), r. t. [< cTO-i + beam.'] (mod. Se. emmers, aumers), < AS. eemergean us; earlier in Kilian, 1598), < G. dial. (Swiss)
To beam upon ; make brilliant, as with beams cmbrit^e, emmeritz, equiv. to MHG. amerinc,
of light. S. Fletcher.
(Leechd, iii. 30, 18), cemyrian (Benson), pi., =
embed, imbed (em-, im-bed'), v. t. ; pret. and
MLG. dmere, emere, dmer, LG. emem, aumern dmerinc, G. emmering, dmmering (= MD. emme-
pp. tmbedded, imbedded, ppr. embedding, imbed-
OHG. eimurja, MHG. eimere, eimer, 6. dial. rinck), G. also emmerling, dmmerling (= MD. em-
=
ding. [< cfH-i, ini-1, + fcedi.] To lay in or as in
(Bav.) aimem, emmern leel. eimyrja Norw. merlinck), a bunting, dim. of OHG. amero, MHG.
= =
eimyrja, aamyrja (also, by popular etym., eld-
amer, G. ammer, a bunting, AS. amore, E. =
a bed ; lay in surrounding matter : as, to embed *ammer, hammer, in yellmchanimer : see yelloic-
a thing in clay or sand.
myrja, as if ield Icel. cldr, fire (see elding), = A
In the absence of a vascular system, or In the absence
+ myrja, embers; but Norw. (eastern dial.) hammer.] genus of buntings, conirostral pas-
of one that is well marked off from the imbeddinff tissues,
myrja Sw. morja, embers, is itself an abbr. serine birds of the family FringiUida:, such as
=
the . crude blood gets what small aeration it can only
. . 01 eimyrja) Dan. cmmer, pi., embers. The ult. the common corn-bunting of Europe (E. mili-
=
aria), the yellow bunting (£. citrinella), the
by coming near the creature '• outer surface. origin is linknown.] A small live coal, brand
H. Spencer, Prin. of Biol., i 307. of wood, or the like; in the plural, live cinders cirl-bunting (£. cirlus), the ortolan (.E. hortu-
Tlie imbedding material la to be slowly poured in, until lana), etc. The limits of the genus are indefinite, and
or ashes; the smouldering remains of a fire.
the imbedded •outaoce is entirely corered. the term has no more exact meaning than bxmtinff (which
W. B. Carpenter, Micros., i 189. O gracious Qod remove my great incumbers, see). In a late restricted sense it includes more than &0
I
Kindle again my faiths neer-dying imbers. species, confined to the Palsearctic, Indian, and Ethiopian
Embedded crystal. See crystal.
Sylvester, tr. of Du Bartas's Weeks, ii., The Ark. regions. None of the very many North and South Amer-
embelift, «• [MK., a word of uncertain origin, He takes a lighted ember out of the covered vessel. ican buntings which have been called Emberiza properly
found only in Chaucer's "'Treatise on the As- Colebrooke. belong to this genus. See Emberiziiux, and cuts under
trolabe"; prob. an extreme corruption (the He rakes hot embers, and renews the fires.
inintinfj and cirl-bunting.
form being appar. accom. initially to ME. embe-, Dryden, JEneid. Emberizidse (em-be-riz'i-de), n. pi. [NL., <
umbe-, um-, around (see tim-), and terminally So long as ota hearts preserve the feeblest spark of life,
Embcrisa + -idee.] The buntings rated as a
to OF. -if, E. -ive) of a word not otherwise they preserve also, shivering near that pale ember, a family of conirostral passerine birds.
found in ME., namely, 'oblik, mod. E. oblique, starved, ghostly longing for appreciation and affection. Emberizinse (em'be-ri-zi'ne), n. pi. [NL., <
< L. obliguus, oblicus, slanting, oblique: see
Charlotte Bronte, Shirley, x. Emberiza + -ince.] The true buntings rated
oblique.'] Oblique; slanting. ember^ (em'Wr), n. [In mod. E. and ME. as a subfamily of FringiUida:. The group is prob-
< ME. embyr-, ymber-, umbri-
Nuta that this forseid rihte orlsonte that is clepid orison only in comp. ; ably insusceptible of zo()logical definition. It has of late
(see ember-days, ember-week), < AS. ymbren-, in been made one of three sul)families of Frinsillidat (the
rectum, diuideth the equinoxial into rlht angles, and the others being Coccothraustinoe and Frinjjitliiice), having
emb^if orisonl«, wher as the pol Is enhawsed vpon the comp. ymbren-dceg, ember-day, ymbren-wice, the nasal bones short, not extended backward beyond
oriaonte, ouerkeruyth the etiuinoxial In embtlif angles. ember-week, ymbren-ftesten, ember-fast; also the fore border of the orbits, the mandibular toniia not
Chaucer, Astrolabe (ed. Skeat), p. 37.
abbr. ymbren, dat. pi. ymbrenum, ember-days; < conterminous throughout, leaving a gape in the com-
enibeliset, r. (. A Middle English form of em- embryke, embrin, ymbren, ymbrene, ymbryne, a cir- missural line of the bill, and the gonydeal angle well
ie//i.s7i. marked. In such acceptation, the Emberizinae include
cuit, course (geires ymbryne, the year's course aliout .'iO genera, of most parts of the world, represented
embellish (em-bel'ish), v. t. [Formerly also Lenctenes ymbren, the vernal equinox, lit. the by many of the most common buntings, finches, and
imUllish; embeUssken, embeliten, enbeli-
< 'M.E. return of spring) ; < ymb, ymbe.cmbe, around (= ' sparrows of English-speaking countries, especially of
'
gen, < OF. (and F.) embellisa-, stem of certain the United States, as the chip-, snow-, and vesper-bird,
OHG. umbi-, G. um-, L. ambi-, Gr. a//0(-, around:
parts of embellir Pr. embcUir, embeHezir = Sp. = see ambi-, amphi-, um-), ryne, a running, a + lark-flneh, lark- and towhee-bunting, black-throated bunt-
ing, white-throated and white-crowned sparrows, field-,
Vg. embellecer =
It. imbellire, < L. in- + bellus course, < rinnan, run. The Icel. imbru-dagar, fox-, song-, swamp-, and savannah-sparrows, the long-
> OF. bel, etc.), fair, beautiful see beau, belle, See Emberiza.
:
OSw. ymberdagar, Norw. imbredagar, ember- spurs, etc.
i^eauty.] To set oflf with ornamentation ; make days, Icel. imbru-ndtt, ember-night, Icel. imbru- emberizine (em-be-ri'zin), a. [< NL. emberizi-
beautiful, pleasing, or attractive to the eye or vika, Norw. imbrcrika, ember-week, are in the nus: see Emberizince.] Of or pertaining to the
the mind ; adorn ; decorate ; deck : as, to em- first element from the E. while the equiv. Sw. ;
genus Emberiza; related to or resembling a
bellish the person with rich apparel; to embel- tamper-dagar, Dan. tamper-dage, also kvatember, bunting. Coues.
lish a garden with shrubs and flowers; a style D. quatertemper, quatemper, LG. tamper, quater- Emberizoides (em'be-ri-zoi'dez), n. [NL. (C.
embellished by metaphors; a book embelliehed tamper, G. quatember, formerly lottembcr, kot- J. Tomminck, 1824), < Emberiza + Gr. tWof,
by engravings. temer, etc., are corruptions of the ML. quatuor form.] A
not-
Bay leaves betweene. tempora, the four seasons, applied to the ember- able genus of
And primroces greene, South Ameri-
BmbelCisk the sweete violet days.] Literally, a circuit; a course; specifi-
Spenser, Shep. CaL, April. cally, a regular ("annual, quarterly, etc.) course can frin^il-
the regular return of a given season: a word linebirdswith
The sloping field . . . was embeliished with blne.bells
and centaury. Goldsmith, Vicar, v. now used only in certain compounds, namely, long acumi-
And so we most snppoae this Ignorant Diomedes, thou{(h ember-day.?, -eve, -fast, -tide, -week, and in tfie nate tail-fea-
* mlh:Uuihin<j th« stoiY acoordlng to his slender means, stUl (Ifrivativo emhcring. See the etymology. thers, typi-
I'l h:\\<: built upon Old traditions. De Quineey, Homer, ii. [Early mod. cal species of
ember-days (em'btr-daz), n.pl.
'
'lat . . the instinct of an artistic people could do
.
E. also amber-dayes ; < ME. embyr-dayes, ymber- which are E.
ilish the fairi'iit cities of the fair Italian land was macrura and
Liid done lavishly. dayes, earlier umbri-dawcs, < AS. ymbrcn-dceg,
pi. -dagas (also simply ymbren), ember-days
E. sphenura.
K. Diety, Victor Emmanuel, p. 231.
= 8yn. Ornament, Decorate, See see ember^ and day^.] Days in each of the four Also called
etc. (see adorn). list
seasons of the year set apart by the Roman Tard'wola.
embellisher (em-bel'ish-^r), n. One who or Catholic and other western liturgical churches Embemagra
that which embellishes. for prayer and fasting. They are the Wednesday, (em-ber-iia'-
These therefore have only certain heads, which they are >"riday, and .Saturday after the first Sunday in I>ent, after gra), n. [NL.
as eUxjnent upon as they can, and may lie called embeU Whit-.Sunday, after September 14th, and after December (R! p. Les-
luli'm. Spectator, No. 121. l;lth. Tile weeks in which ember-days fall are eiilled ember- son, 1831), <
weeks. The Sundays imme'ii.itely following these seasons
embellishingly (em-bel'ish-ing-li), adv. So as are still appointed by the canons of the Anglican Church
Embcr(iza) +
to embfUlish with embcllislunents. Imp. Diet,
; for the ordination of priests and deacons. {Ta)tUigra.] A Texas Spanow {Emiemagra rufcmi* gata).
119
! ;
-t- TinTtiVj TtKelv, bring f orth ( > ToKof, offspring).] Stout Hercules
embesyt, v. t. Same as embusy. Skelton. The typical genus of the family Embiotocidce. Emblaz'd his trophies on two posts of brass.
embettert (em-bet'6r), v. t. [< em-^ + better^.'] L. Agassiz, 1853. Oreene, Orlando Furioso.
To malce better. emblazon (em-bla'zon),
[< em-1 -f- blazon.]
emblotocid (em-bi-ot'o-sid), n. One of the Em- 1?.
For cruelty doth not embetter men, biotocidce. 1. trans. 1. To adorn -with
figures of heraldry
But them more wary make than they have heen. or ensigns armorial: as, a shield emblazoned
Daniel, Chorus in Fhilotas. Embiotocidse (em'bi-o-tos'i-de), n.pl. [NL., <
Embiotoca + -idw.] A family of viviparous with armorial bearings.
embezzle (em-bez'l), «;. t. ; pret. and pp. embez-
acanthopterygian fishes, related to the lab- Boys paraded the streets, bearing banners emblazoned
zled, ppr. embezzling. [Early mod. E. (16th with the arms of Aragon. Prescott, Ferd. and Isa., i. 3.
roids the surf-fishes, in the widest sense. They
;
cent.) imbezzle, imbezel, embesyll, embecyll, em- are of ordinary compressed oval form, like the white perch,
besel, imbesel, imbezil, imbecill, etc., weaken, di-
2. To depict or represent, as an armorial en-
and have cycloid scales, lateral line continuous and paral-
sign on a shield.
minish, filch, < imbecile(accented on 2d syll.), lel with the back, head and mouth small, with jaw-teeth
< OF. imbeciJle, weak, feeble: see imbecile, and only, the single dorsal tin 8- to 18-spined, folding into a My shield, . . .
groove in the back, and the anal fin long and 3-spined. On which when Cupid, with his killing bow
ct.bezzle.] If. To weaken; diminish the power They are mostly small fishes, the largest only 18 inches And cruell shafts, embtazond she beheld.
or extent of. long, the smallest 4 or 5. All are viviparous, a remarkable At sight thereof she was with terror queld.
fact first made known to science in 1853 ; 10 to 20 young are Spenser, F. Q., IV. x. B6.
And so iinbecUl all theyr strengthe that they are naught
born at a litter. Nearly all are marine, abounding on the
to me. Drant, tr. of Horace's Satires, i. 6.
Pacific coast of the United States, where they are among
3. To set off with ornaments ; decorate ; illu-
The seconde plage of the seconde angell, as the seconde the inferior food-fishes, and are called perches, porgies, minate.
jadgemeute of God against the regiment of Rome, and shiners, etc. About 20 species, referred to about a dozen Ere heaven's emblazoned by the rosy dawn.
this is imbeselynge and dimynishe of their power and do- genera, are now known. Of these species 17 are confined Domestic cares awake him. J. Philips, Cider, ii.
minion, many landes and people fallynge from them. to the Pacific coast waters of North America, and one is
J. Udall, Revelations of St. John, xvi. peculiar to the fresh waters of California. The marine The walls were . . . emblazoned with legends in com-
species belong to the subfamily Embiotocinee, the fresh-wa- memoration of the illustrious pair. Prescott.
2t. To waste or dissipate in extravagance ; mis- ter species to the subfamily Hysterocarpiiue. The family Those stories of courage and sacrifice which emblazon
appropriate or misspend. has also been called Ditremid(e, Ditremuta, Holconoti, the annals of Greece and Rome. Sumner, Orations, 1. 12.
I do not like that this unthrifty youth should embezzle and llotcoitotidce. See cut under Ditremidce.
away the money. 4. To celebrate in laudatory terms ; sing the
Embiotocinae (em-bi-ot-o-si'ne), re. pi. [NL., <
praises of.
Beau, and Fl., Enight of Burning Pestle, ii. 2. Embiotoca + -ince.] The surf-fishes proper, or
When thou hast enibezzled all thy store. marine embiotocoids, the typical subfamily of We find Augustus emblazoned by the poets.
. . .
public money with embezzling it. J. Adams, Works, V. 25. more bitter. [Rare in the literal sense.] animadversions to be a slanderous and scurrilous libel.
Milton, Apology for Smectymnuus.
5t. To confuse ; amaze. One grain of bad embitters all the best.
They came where Sancho was, astonisht and embeseled Dryden, Iliad, i. 775. emblazonment (em-bla'zon-ment), n. [< em-
with what he heard and saw. 2. To affect with bitterness or unhappiness blazon +
-ment.] 1. The act of emblazoning.
Shelton, tr. of Don Quixote (1652), fol. 158, back. make distressful or grievous as, the sins of : — 2. That which is emblazoned. Imp. Diet.
embezzlement (em-bez'l-ment), n. [< embezzle youth often embitter old age. emblazonry (em-bla'zon-ri), n. [< emblazon +
+ -ment.] The act of embezzling specifically, ; Is there anything that more embitters the enjoyments of -ry.] 1. The act or art of emblazoning. 2. —
the act by which a clerk, servant, or other per- this life than shame ? Smith, Sermons. Heraldic decoration, as pictures or figures upon
son occupying a position of trust fraudulently Stem Powers who make their care shields, standards, etc.
appropriates to his own use the money or goods To embitter human life, malignant Deities.
Who saw the Banner reared on high
M. Arnold, Empedocles on Etna.
intrusted to his care; a criminal conversion; In all itsdread emblazonry.
To open the door of escape to those who live in conten- Wordsworth, White Doe of Rylstone,
the appropriation to one's self by a breach of tion would not necessarily embitter the relations of those iii.
trust of the property or money of another "a who are happy. ; JV. A. Rev., CXXXIX. 240.
Thine ancient standard's rich emblazonry.
Abp. Tre}ich, Gibraltar.
sort of statutory larceny, committed by ser-
3. To render more violent or malignant; exas-
vants and other like persons where there is a perate.
emblem (em'blem), re. [= D. embleem = Gr.
and therefore no trespass, so that
trust reposed, Dan. Sw. emblem; < OF. embleme, F. emblbme
the act would not be larceny at the common
Men, the yuy&tenibittered against each other by former
contests. Bancroft.
= Sp. Pg. emblema = It. emblemo, < L. emblcma,
law" (Bishop). pi. emblemata, raised ornaments on vessels, tes-
embitterer (em-bit'6r-6r), n. One who or that sellated work, mosaic, < Gr. £u(i?,7i/ja(T-), an in-
To remove doubts which had existed respecting embez- which embitters.
zlements l)y merchants' and bankers' clerks, it was enact- sertion (L. sense not recorded in Gr.), < ifipak-
ed, by the 39 George III. ch. 85, that if any servant or The fear of death has always been considered as the ?.eiv, put in, lay on, < h, in, -I- /3d//.f(r, cast,
clerk should by virtue of his employment receive any greatest enemy of human quiet, the polluter of the feast
of happiness, and the embitterer of the cup of joy.
throw, put.] It. That which is put in or on in-
money, bills, or any valuable security, goods or effects,
in the name or on the account of his master or employer, Johnson. laid work inlay ; inlaid or mosaic work some-
; ;
and should afterwards embezzle any part of the same, he thing ornamental inserted in another body.
shall be deemed to have feloniously stolen the same, and
embitterment (em-bit'6r-ment), n. [< embit-
should be subject to transportation for any term not ex- ter + -ment.] The act of embittering. Under foot the violet.
Crocus, and hyacinth, with rich inlay
ceeding fourteen years. The commotions, terrors, expectations, and einbitter-
Broider'd the ground, more colour'd than with stone
Blackstone, Com., IV. xvii., note 3. ments of repentance. Of cosiWest emblem. Milton, P. L., iv. 703.
Embezzlement is distinguished from larceny, properly Plutarch, Morals (trans.), iv. 155 (Ord MS.).
2. A symbolical design or figure with explana-
80 called, as being committed in respect of property which emblancht (em-blanch'), V. t. [< ME. em-
is not, at the time, in the actual or legal possession of the tory writing ; a design or an image suggesting
blaunclien, < OF. emblanchir, *enblanchir, en-
owner. Burrill. some truth or fact the expression of a thought
blancir, whiten, < en- +
blanchir, whiten, < blanc,
;
-idw.] A
small family of neuropterous (pseu- Works damn'd, or to be damn'd (your father's fault)
Go, purified by flames, ascend the sky,
an object used as a symbol ; an allusive figure;
doneuropterous) insects, of the group Corro- Not sulphur -tipp'd, emblaze an alehouse fire.
. . .
commonly emblematic. See device, 7. emblematize (em'blem-a-tiz), V. t. pret. and ; embody thought in words; legislation is embod-
Know
ye the lami where the cypress and myrtle pp. emblematized, ppr. emblematizing. [< L. em- ied in statutes architecture is embodied art.
;
Are emblems of deeds that are done in their clime? blema{t-), emblem, -f- -ize.] To represent or At this turn, sir, you may perceive tliat I have again
Byr&n, Bride of Abydos, i. 1. express by means of an emblem as, to emblem^ : made use of the Piatonick hypothesis, that Spirits are
A fit emblem, both of the events in memory of which it atize a thought, a quality, or the like. embodied. GlanviUe, Witchcraft, § 11.
is raised, and of the gratitude of those who have reared Anciently the sun was emblematized by a starry figure. The soul while it is embodied can no more be divided
it. D. Webster, Speech, Bunker Hill, June 17, 1826. from sin, tlian the body itself can be considered without
Bp. Hurd, Marks of Imitation.
4. An example. [Rare.] emblement (em'ble-ment), n. [< OF. emblae-
flesh. South, Sermons, XI. i.
(Lord's Day) Comes Mr. Herbert, Mr. Honiwood'a man, ment, emblaiement, emblayement, crop, harvest, Morals can never be safely embodied in the constable.
—
and dined with me a very honest, plain, and well-mean-
< emblaer, embleer, etnblaier, emblayer, also em-
Lowell, Fireside Travels, p. 56.
ing man, I thinlc him to be ; and, by his discourse and Doctrines, we are afraid, must generally be embodied be-
manner of life, the true emblem of an old ordinary serv- blader (also, without prefix, bluer, bleer, blayer), fore they can excite a strong public feeling, ilacaulay.
ing-man. Pepy*, Diary, II. 159. F. emblaver (= It. imbiadare), < ML. imbladare, Even among ourselves embodied righteousness some-
= SylL 2 and 3. Emblem, Symbol, Type. Emblem and sym- sow with grain, < L. in, in, -t- ML. bladum (> OF. times takes the same abstract form.
bol refer to tangible objects ; type may refer also to an act,
as when the lifting up of the brazen serpent (Num. xxi. 8,
ble, blee, blef, bled, F. bU, bled Pr. blat It. = = E. A. Freeman, Venice, p. 388.
biado, biada), grain (orig. crop, as that which is 2. To form or collect into a body or united
9)i8 said to a type of the cniciflxiou, the serpent being
t>e
a type or enMem of Christ. A symbol
is generally an em- taken away), orig. "ablatum, neut. of L. abla- mass; collect into a whole; incorporate; or-
blem which baa become recognized or standard among tus, pp. of auferre, carry away: see ablative.] ganize ; concentrate as, to embody troops ; to
:
men a volume proposing new signs of this sort would
;
1. pi. In law, those annual agricultural pro- embody scattered traditions or folk-lore.
be called a " boolc of emblems "; but an emblem may be a
symbf)l, as the bread and wine at the Lord's supper are
ducts which demand culture, as distinguiAed Recorded among the
visits of kings and ambassadors in
more often called emblems than symbols of Christ's death. from those which grow spontaneously; crops a precious chronicle that embodied the annals of all pub-
Symbol is by tliis rule tlie appropriate word for the con- which require annual planting, or, like hops, licevents and copies of public documents.
ventional signs in mathematics. Emblem is most often annual training and culture. Emblements thus SttMs, Medieval and Modern Hist., p. 145.
used of moral and religious matters, and type chiefly of We
shall be able to fall back upon the MiUtia battal-
include corn, potatoes, and most garden vegetables, but
religious doctrines, institutions, historical facts, etc. Type ions, which will be at once embodied, and through whose
not fruits, and generally not grass. They are deemed per-
in its religious application generally points forward to an ranks will be poured into the fighting ranks of the active
sonal property, and pass as such to the executor or ad-
atuitype. army a continual supply of drilled and disciplined re-
ministrator of the occupier, instead of going with the
Bose of the desert ! thou art to me land to his heir, if he die before he has cut, reaped, or cruits. Nineteenth Century, XIX. 269.
An emblem of stainless purity.
harvested them ; they also belong to the tenant when his
D. M. Moir, The White Bo«e. = S3m. 2. To combine, compact, integrate, comprehend,
tenancy has been terminated by an unexpected event with- comprise.
All things are symbols : the external shows out his agency, aa by his death or that of his landlord.
Of nature have their image in the mind. n, To unite into a body, mass, or
intrans.
If a tenant for his own life sows the lands, and dies be- collection; coalesce.
LonofeUow, The Harvest Moon.
fore harvest, his executors shall have the emblements, or
Beauty was lent to Nature as the type proflu of the crop. Blackstone, Com., II. 8.
The idea of white, which snow yielded yesterday, and
Of heaven's unspeakable and holy joy. another idea of white from another snow to-day, put to-
S. J. HaU, Beauty. 2. The right to such crops.— Emblements Act, an gether in your mind, embody and run into one. Locke.
English sutute of 1851 (14 and 15 Vict., c. 26), which en-
emblem (em'blem), c. *. [< emblem, «.] To rep- acted that, instead of having a right to emidements, a ten-
To embody against this court party and its practices.
resent or suK^est by an emblem or symboli- ant under a tenant for life, on the determination of the Burke, Present Discontents.
cally; symbolize; emblematize. [Bare.] tenancy, shall hold until the expiration of the then current embog (em-bog'), V. t. ; pret. and pp. embogged,
year ; that growing crops seized umler execution shall he To plunge
Why may he not be embUm'd by the coienlng fig.tree ppr. embogging. [< em-l -*- bog^.]
liable for accruing rent that the tenant may remove his
;
tliat our Saviour curs'd? Feltham, Besolves, L 80. improvements unless the landlord elect to take them and into or cause to stick in a bog ; mire.
;
j«iy it and recover as on a simple contracts was enclosed embogged, and defeated.
ts). [L. : see emblem.'] In arckaol.: (a) An . . .
Dan. Sw. emblematisk), < L. as if 'embUmatums, Sweet, O sweet, the warbling throng, < L. in (> Sp. en, etc.), in, -^ bucca, the cheek
< emblema, emhlem: see emblem.'] 1. Pertain- On the white emblossom'd spray I (> Sp. boca, Pg. boeea. It. bocca, F. bouche, the
Nature's unlveiaal song mouth): Bee bucca, anAcf. disembogue.] To dis-
ing to or constituting an emblem; using or
Echoes to tbe rising day.
dealing in emblems; symbolic. charge itself, as a river, at its mouth ; disem-
Cunningham, Day, A PastoraL
And wet his brow with hallowed wine. bogue; debouch. [Rare or unused.]
And on his finger given to shine embodier (em-bod'i-6r), n. One who or that emboilt (em-boil'), t'. [< em-1 + boiU.] I.
The emblematic gem. Seott, Uarmlon, tr. 8. whicli embodies ; one who gives form to any- trans. To heat ; cause to bum, as with fever.
And so, because the name (like many names) ean be thing. Formerly also imbodier. Faynt, wearie, sore, emboyled, grieved, brent.
made tn yield a fanciful embUmatie meaning. Homer must He [Shakspere} must have been perfectly conscious of With heat, toyle, wounds, armes, smart, and inward Are,
lie a myth. De Quineey, Homer, L his genius, and of tlie great trust he imposed upon his That never man such mischiefes did torment.
native tongue as the embodier and perpetuator of it. Spenser, F. Q., I. xi. 28.
2. Representative by some allusion or custom-
Lowell, Among my Books, 1st ser,, p. 165.
ary association; suggestive through similarity n. intrans. To boil 'violently; hence, to rage
of qualities or conventional significance: as, a embodiment (em-bod'i-ment), n. [Formerly with pride or anger.
crown is emblematic of royalty ; whiteness is em- also iiiihiidimcnt ; < embody + -ment.] 1. In- The knight emboyling in his haughtie hart,
blematic of purity. vestment with or manifestation through an ani- Knitt all his forces. Spenser, F. Q., IL iv. 9.
Glanced at the legciidary Anuuon mate body ; incarnation bodily presentation ;
Sir T. Browne, V'ulg. Err., ill. 12. principles in a treatise. embolsemia, «. See embolemia.
He took a great stone and put it up under the oak, em- e»»-i -H bold.] To
Uematieally joining the two great element* of masonry. A visible memory of the past, and a sparkling embodi- emboldt (em-bold'), v. t. [<
ment of the present. Lathrop, Spanish Vistas, p. 104. embolden.
Sir{ft.
Multiform embodiments of selfishness in unjust laws. But now we dare not shew our selfe In place,
emblematicalneflB (em-ble-mat'i-kal-nes), R. H. Spencer, Social Statics, p. 451. Ne vs embold to dwel in company
The L'haraoter of being emblematical. Bailey, He [the .Sultanj has no rights, for wrong can have no There as our hert would loue right faithfully.
1727. Court of Love.
rights, and his whole position is the embodiment of wrong.
emblematicize (em-ble-mat'i-slz), r. t; pret. E. A. Freeman, Amer, Lects., p. 415. embolden (em-'bol'dn), r. t. [< em-1 -)- Jojfj -(-
and pp. <mhlcmatici:ed, ppr. emblematicicing. 3. Collection or formation into an aggregate -««!.] To give boldness or courage to ; make
[< emblematic + -i:e.] To represent by or em- body organization ;
; an aggregate whole in-
;
bolder encourage. ;
body in an emblem; emblematize. [Rare.] corporation; concentration: bs, the embodiment With these Persuasions they [Richard and Geoffery] pass
He IGiacomo Amiconij drew the queen and the three eld- of troops into battalions, brigades, divisions, over into Normandy, and join with their Brother Henry,
est prlnceaaea, and prints were taken from his pictures, who, emboldned by their Assistance, grows now more in-
etc. ; the embodiment of a country's laws.
whlili he generally endeavoured to emblematieize by genii solent than he was before. Baker, Chronicles, p. 54.
and cupids. WalpoU, Anecdotes of Painting, Iv. S. Our own Common Law is mainly an embodiment of the It generally seen among Privateers that nothing im-
is
"customs of the realm." boldens them sooner to mutiny than want.
emblematist (em'blem-a-tist), n. [< L. em- n. Spencer, Prin. of SocloL, i 629. Dampier, Voyages, I. 146.
blema(t-), eml)lem. -I- -isi.] A writer or an in-
embody (em-bod'i), V. pret. and pp. embodied,
; Fame ... so gentle, so retiring, that it seemed no
ventor of emblems.
ppr. embodying. [Formerly also imbodu; < em-i more than an assured and emboldened modesty.
Thus began the descriptions of griphins, basilisks, phra-
nix. and many more which evfMcmatists and heralds have
;
+ body.] I. trans. 1. To invest with an ani- Lovxll, J^reside Travels, p. 54.
entertained with signiflcationa answering their Instltu- mate body; lodge in a physical form; incarnate; emboldener (em-bol'dn-Sr), n. One who or that
MoM. air T. Browne, Vulg. Err., T. 80. hence, to give form to; formulate; coordinate which emboldens.
— ;
emboli, ". Plural of embolus. A mineral consisting chiefly of the chlorid of condition: en, in; bon, good; point, point,
degree, condition: see i/il, bonus, and jwint.]
eiIlboliai(em-b6'li-a), «.; iil.emboli<e(-e). [NL., silver and the bromide of silver, found in Chili
< Gr. iu3o?.t/, insertion : see embolism.'] Same and Mexico: so called because intermediate be- Exaggerated plumpness; rotundity of figure;
as emboiism. tween cerargyrito and bromyrite. stoutness a euphemism tov fatness ot fleshiness.
:
embolia-, «. Plural of emboUum. embolium (em-bo'li-um), n. pi. embolia f-a). ; A clearness of skin almost bloom, and a plumpness al-
[NL., < Gr. £uf}6hov, something thrown in, < i/i- most embonpoint, softened the decided lines of her fea-
embolic (em-bol'ik), (I. [< embohis, or emboly, + tures. Charlotte Brontii, The Professor, xviii.
,3o/'.of, thrown in: seeembolus.] Anouterormar-
-ic] 1. Inserted; intercalated; emboUsmic.
ginal part of the cerium found in the hemelytra Tile Qiieen [Victoria] was not very tall, but until . . .
2. In pathol., relating to embolism, or plugging embonpoint overtook her, her figure was exquisitely beau-
of a blood-vessel. —
3. Pertaining to emboly; of certain heteropterous insects, it resembles
the rest of the corium in consistence, and is separated
tiful. Fortnightly Rev., N. S., XLII. 285.
characterized by or resulting from emboly. from it only by a thickened rib or vein. emborder (em-b6r'der), V. t. [Formerly also
The two-layered gastnila is as a rule developed from embolize (em'bo-liz), v. t. pret. and pp. embo- imborder; < em-^ +
border. Cf. OF. emborder,
the blastosphere by . embolic invagination.
. .
UxdyjnpT. embolising. [< embolus
;
EmboliminsB (em-bol-i-mi'ne), «. pi. [NL., < centra interposed between the regular verte- embordered (em-b6r'd6rd),
p. a. [Formerly
JEmbolim us +
-inw.] A
subfamily of Proctotry- bral bodies, so that each vertebral arch has two also imbordered (in heraldry also embordured) ;
pidw, having the hind wings lobed, the male centra, whence the name.
pp. of emborder, v.] Adorned with a border;
ant«nn89 10-jointed, the female 13-jointed. embolomerism (cm-bo-lom'e-rizm), n. [< em- specifically, in her., having a border an epithet :
There are two genera, Embolimus and Fedinom- bolomcr-ous -ism.] +
Formation of the verte- used only when the border is of the same tinc-
ma. Forster, 1856. bral column by means of intereentra between ture as the field.
Embolimus (em-bol'i-mus), n. [NL. (West- the centra; diplospondylism. embosom (em-buz'um), V. t. [Formerly also
wood, 1833), al- embolomerous (em-bo-lom'e-ms), a. [< NL. imbosom; < ok-I -i- bosom.] 1. To take into or
so improp. Em- *embolomerus, < Gr. ejijioWoi;, ttrown in, /^fpo?, +
hold in the bosom: hold in nearness or inti-
bolemiis,<Gv. kfi- part.] Thrown in, as intercalated centra or macy; admit to the heart or affections; cherish.
ft6?u/A0(, insert- intereentra, between arch-bearing bodies of the This gracelesse man, for furtherance of his guile.
ed, interpolat- vertebrre of the spinal column having inter-; Did court the handmayd of my Lady deare,
ed : see embo- eentra, as a spinal column ; diplospondylie. Who, glad t' eiribosome his affection vile,
lism.] A genus The caudal region is embolomermis.
Did all she might more pleasing to appeare.
Spenser, F. Q., II. iv. 25.
of parasitic hy- E. D. Cope, Geol. Mag., II. 627.
menopterous 2. To inclose ; embrace ; encircle.
insects, of the embolon, embolum (em'bo-lon, -lum), n. ;
pi.
His house embosomed in tlie grove.
family I'rocto- embola (-la). [L. embolum, < Gr. i/ilioAov, neut., Pope, Imit. of Horace, IV. i. 21.
trypicUe, typical iliPoTiOf, masc, the bronze beak or ram of a The kingdom of Navarre, embosomed within the
little
of the subfami- Pyrenees. Prescott, Ferd. and Isa., Int.
ly Emboliminm, Safe-cm&osometZ by the night.
characterized Browning, Ring and Book, I. 2C.
by the antennal emboss^ (em-bos'), t'- t. [Formerly also imftoss;
scape, which is early mod. E. also enbosse; < ME. enbossen, en-
Embolimus afruricanus, about live
shorter than the
times natural size. bocen, < OP. embosser, enbocer, swell or arise in
first joint of the bunches, emboss, < en- -(- bosse, a boss: see
fnniele. One North American and two Euro- boss^.] To form bosses on; fashion relief
1.
pean species are known. Usually spelled Em- or raised work upon oi'nament with bosses or ;
the current of the circulating medium from discourse of meaningless and usually more or cifically, in embroidery, to raise in relief by in-
some more or less distant locality. Embolism less sonorous words. serting padding under the stitches. See emboss-
commonly causes paralysis in the brain, with embolum, n. See embolon. ing.
more or less of an apoplectic shock. 4. In — embolus (em'bo-lus), n. pi. ;
emboli (-li).
the piston of a "pump, < Gr. efil3o?.o(:, masc, c/^- upon a purple ground.
[L., Exhibiting flowers in their natural colours, embossed
liturgies, a prayer for deliverance from evil, in- Scott.
serted in almost all liturgies after the Lord's Po7iov, neut., anything pointed so as to thrust in Whitewashed arcade pillars, on which were embossed
Prayer, as an expansion of or addition to its easily, apeg, stopper, etc., prop, an adj., thrown the royal arms of Castile. Lathrop, Spanish Vistas, p. 60.
closing petition, whence the name. Also embo- or thrust in, or that may be thrown or thrust
emboss^t (em-bos'), "• [,(. emboss^, V. Ct.boss'^,
in, < ifi^aXkeiv, thrust in, throw in, < iv, in, -t-
lismus.
jiakleiv, throw.] 1. Something inserted into
11.] boss a protuberance. A ;
emboUsmic, embolismical (em-bo-liz 'mik, -mi- < f/j,'?a/.A£iv, throw in : see embolus.] Inembryol., be *embosk, < OF. embosqucr Sp. Pg. embos- =
kal), a. [< embolism + -ic, -ical.] Pertaining that mode of invagination by which a vesicu- car =
It. imboscarc, ML. imboscare, hide in a
to or formed by intercalation or insertion in- ;
lar morula or blastosphere becomes a gastrula. wood, set in ambush. The older form, ME.
It may be illustrated l)y the process of tucking half of a
tercalated; inserted; embolic. hollow india-ruliber ball into the other half, and is elTeeted enbussen, etc., appears in ambush, q. v.] To
Twelve lunations form a common year, and thirteen the by the more or leas complete inclusion of the hypoblastic conceal in or as in a wood or thicket.
emboiumic year. Grosier, Cliina (trans.). blastonieres within the epiblastic blastomeres, with tlie Like that self-gotten bird
result of the diminution or abolition of the original blasto- In the Arabian woods embost,
The [Hebrew] year is luni-solar, and, according as it is cceie, the formation of an archenteron or primitive ali-
ordinary or en^xMgmic, consists of twelve or thirteen That no second knows nor third.
mentary cavity with an orifice of invagination or blasto- Milton, S. A., I. 1700.
Itmar months, each of which has 29 or 30 days. pore, and thus the formation of a two-layered germ whose
Encyc. Brit., IV. 677.
double walls consist of a hypoblastic endoderm and an emboss^t (em-bos'), V. t. [Altered from reg.
embolismus (em-bo-liz'mus), n. [LL. embolis- epiblastic ectoderm, which is therefore a gastrula. *emboist, < OF. cmboister, inclose, insert, fas-
mus, insertion, intercalation: see embolism.] embondaget (em-bon'daj), V. t. [< em-i -I- bond- ten, put or shut up, as within a box, < en, in, +
Same as embolism, 4. age.] To reduce to bondage; enslave. boiste, mod. P, boite, a box : see boist^, bushel\
; :
; ; ;
;; ; : ;
I am emboKt
bend; bow. [AJchaic] Cotton, in Walton's Angler, ii. 226.
With trotting all the streets to And Pandolfo. 1saw a bull as white as driven snowe. Strong .Son of God, immortal Love,
J. Tomkiint (?), Albumazar. With gilded lionies. embtneed like the moone. Whom we, that have not seen thy face,
Embossed velvet. Same as raited velcet (which see, un-
Spenser, Visions of the World's Vanity. By faith, and faith alone, embrace.
Tennyson, III Memoriam, Int.
ikr ctr.l). For embmeed windows, I hold them of good use.
embosser (em-bos '6r), n. One who or that BacoH, Building (ed. 1887). He took his place upon the double throne,
She cast herself before him on her knees,
which embosses something used for producing
; To walk the studious cloysters pale,
Embracing his.
raised figures or impressions. And'love the hiah-emUnced roof.
William Morris, Earthly Paradise, I. 412.
With aiilick pillars massy proof.
The first form of Morse recorder was the Etubcufr. Milton, II Penseroso, 1. 157. 2. To inclose; encompass; contain; encircle.
Freeee and Sicewright, Telegraphy, p. 67.
Dejected embowed. See Ayecfed.— Embowed-con- You'll see your Rome embrac'd with fire, before
embossing (em-bos'ing), «. [Verbal n. of em- trary, in her., same hb cminter-emt>otred. You'll speak with Coriolanus. Shak., Cor., v. 2.
bii.ixi, c] 1. The art or process of producing embo'wel (em-bou'el), f. t. pret. and pp. em- ; Low at his feet his spacious plain is placed.
projecting figures or desigrns in relief hoicelcd or embotcelled, ppr. emboireliiig or em- Between the mountain and the stream embraced.
rai.sei or
upon surfaces. A common method of einltosiiing upon bowelling. [Formerly also imbotcel; < em-l + Sir J. Denham.
a woo<len surface is by driving a blunt tool inU) the wood boirel.'] 1. To inclose in another substance; A river sweeping round.
With gleaming curves the valley diil embrace.
according U} the desired pattern, then planing the surface embed; bury. And seemed to make an island of that place.
down to the level of the sunken design, and afterward Deepe emtxneeld in the earth entyre.
wetting it. The moisture causea the coropresse<l portions
William Morris, Earthly Paradise, I. 233.
Spnuer, F. (J., VI. viii. l!i.
forming the tU*»lgn to rise to their original height, and thus 3. Figuratively, to take, (o) To take or receive
to project from the planed surface. Embossing on leather, 2. [Equiv. to disembowel, q. v.] To remove with willingness; accept as true, desirable, or advanta-
pajHT, or doth, as for book.coverv, hooks for the blind, the bowels or internal parts of; eviscerate. geous make one's own ; take to one's self as, to em-
; :
and various kinds of ornamental work, and also on metal, brace Uie Christian religion, a cause, or an opi)ortunity.
is usually effected by stamping with dies by means of an Fossils, and minerals, that th' emboirel'd earth
Displays. J. PhilijMi, Cider,
With shryfte of monthe and pennaunce sraerte
embossing- or stamping-press, or the Uwkbinders' arm- 1.
They weiie ther blis for to vmbrace.
ing-press. Emtio«snig with the nei-ille is done either by P. Hen. Death hath not struck so fat a deer to-day, Political Poems, etc. (ed. Furnivall), p. 97.
working over a pad made of cloth, sometimes In several Tlioiigh many dearer, in this bloody fray
thicknesses, or by stuffing with w<x>l, hair, or the like, Emliowell'd will I see thee by and by ; I thought he would have embraced this opportunity of
under the threads, as In couched work. See etnbotnwj- speaking to me. Sheridan, School for Scandal, ii. 2.
Till then, in blood by nolile Percy lie.
tnaehine. Falstaf. [Rising slowly.] Embowelled ! Uihouembovel O lift your natures up
2. A raised figure or design ; an embossment. me to-day, I'll give you leave to powder me and eat me Embrace our aims work out your freedom.;
fabrics. 2. A
machine for ornamenting wood- boicetments of leatl and brass. Lamb, Old Benchers. My heart beats thicker than a feverous pulse.
surfaces by pressing hot molds upon the wet Shak., T. and C, iii. 2.
wooil and burning in the pattern, the charcoal embcwer, imbcwer (em-, im-bou'tr), r. [< e»i-i, 6f To throw a protecting arm around ; shield.
im-, + botrcr^.'i I. intrans. 1. To lodge or rest
.
being afterward removed, in some machines en- Seehow the heavens, of voluntary grace
graved rolls are used in place of stamps, and the wood is in or as in a bower. And s<iveraine favor towards chastity,
steamed and passed between the rolls while hot. The small birds, in their wide lioughs embojerinrf, Doe succor sendto her distressed cace ;
3. Amachine for embossing an ornamental de- Chaunted their sundrie tunes with sweet consent. So much high God doth innocence embrace.
sign oil boot- and shoe-fronts. Sj>enser, tr. of Virgil's Guat, 1. 225. Spenser, F. ()., III. viii. 29.
embossing-press (em-bos'ing-pres), n. An ap- 2t. To form a bower. Milton. 7. In bot., to clasp with the base as, a leaf em- :
paratus for stamping and embossing paper, trans. To cover with or as with a bower
n, bracing the stem. —
8. In zooL, to lie closely
cardtxiard, book-covers, leather, etc., and for shelter with or as with foliage form a bower ; in contact with (another part), imperfectly sur-
erasing checks by destroying the texture of the for. rounding it. Thus, elytra are said to embrace the abdo-
paper on which they are written. A shady bank. men when their edu'cs are turned over the abdominal
embossment fem-bos'ment), ». emboss^ + Thick over-head with verdant root imimrer'd. margins wings in repose embrace the body when they
;
[< Millon, P. L., ix. 1938. are <-losely appressed to it, curving down over the sides.
-i«<-;if.J The act of embossing or forming
1.
A small Indian village, pleasantly emfto?wr(?rf in a grove II. intrans. To join in an embrace.
protuberances or knobs upon ii surface; the of spreading elms. Irving, Knickerlwcker, p. 96,
state of being cmlxissed or studded. — 2. A And the silent isle imbo^ters Embracing,
While we stood like fools
out they came,
. . .
prominence liko a boss; a knob or jutting The l-ady of Shnlott. Trustees and Aunts an<l Uncles.
point. Tannytun, Lady of Sbalott Tennyson, Edwin Morris.
embrace 1894
embrace^ (em-bras'), n. [Formerly also »m- embrail (em-bral'), r. t. [< e»j-l + brail.'] N'aut.,
brace; from the verb.] An
inelosiire or clasp to brail up. [Rare.]
with the arms; speclfieally, a pressure to the And he who strives the tempest to disarm
bosom with the arms an embraeement a hug.
; ; Will never first embrail the lee yard-arm.
Falconer, Shipwreck, ii.
Now my embracei ftre for queens and princesses,
For ladies of high mark, for divine beauties. embranchement (F. pron. on-bronsh'mou), n.
Fletcher {and aiiotherl). Prophetess, iii. 1. [F. see embranchment.]
: Same as embranch-
RoU'd in one another's arms, and silent in a last embrace. ment; specifically, one of the main branches
Tennyson, Loclfsley Hall. or divisions of the animal kingdom a branch, ;
braize^. Hence embracer^, embracery.'] In law, embranchment (em-brinch'ment), 11. [< F. em-
to attempt to influence corruptly, as a court or braiichemen t, a branching out, a branch, < em-
jury, by threats, bribes, promises, services, or brancher, branch, < en- +
branche, branch: see
entertainments, or by any means other than branch.] A
branching out, as of trees; ramifi-
evidence or open argument. cation; division.
Punishment for the person embracing [the embracerj is This Fraternity with its ernbranchments.
by fine and imprisonment ; and for the juror so embraced, D. G. Mitchell, Bound Together, v.
if it be by taking money, the punishment is (by divers
statutes of the reign of Edward III.) perpetual infamy, embrangle, imbrangle (em-, im-brang'gl), v. t.;
imprisonment for a year, and forfeiture of the tenfold pret. and pp. embrangled, imbrangled, ppr. em-
value. Btackstone, Com., IV. x. brangling, imbrangUng. [< ew-l, im-, + 'bran-
braces.
The Neapolitan is accounted the best courtier of ladies,
and the greatest embracer of pleasure of any other people.
Howell, Letters, I. i. 39.
embroid 1895
This woful lady ylerned had in yonthe embryo
embroidery-paste (em-broi'dfer-i-past), n. An
So that she werken and embroicden couthe.
Chaucer, Good Women, adhesive mixture used in embroidery n.
intrans. To faU or sink to the condition
2352. I. to make 01 a brute.
embroider (em-broi'der), t. t. [Formerly also materials adhere together, and also to stiffen
tmbroider, embroder, imbroder; extended with *|J^<'^^embroideryat the back. IHct. of Needle- The soul grows clotted by contagion
imbodies, and imbrutes, till she quite
-er,as in braider, q. v., after broidery, embroi- Ihe divine property of her first being. lose
ders, from earlier embroid.'] embroilif (em-broil'), r. t. [< m-l broin +
1. To decorate Milton, Comus,
with oniameutal needlework. See embroidery. Appar. confused with enibroiPJ]
1. 468.
To broil; embryo (em 'bri-6), n. and a. [Formerly also
His garment was disguysed very vayne, embno (also embryon, formerly also
And his embrodered Bonet sat awry. embrion);
"'"brion = Pg. embryao =
Speiuer, F. Q., III. lii. 9. i :J^^'"'.^rf^-
embnow;, < NI.. embi-yon,
Jt.
Thou Shalt embroider the coat of flue linen. erroneously taken,
appar. at first by French writers,
Ex. xiTiii. 39. only to embroU and consume
as embryohi-),
the sacrilegious invadere as If from a Gr. *efillpi,6v,
Some inbndmd with white beads, some with Copper but properly emi
other painted after their manner. ,
Decay 0/ Christian Piety. 6r^o» (reg. L. *e«ibryum), < Gr.
.
lfil3pvov (stem
Capt. John Smith, Tme Travels, I. 130. embrqil2 (em-broil'), ,;. t. [< OF. embroillir, ^flJpv-) the embryo, fetus, also
applied to a
To work with the needle upon a ground: ^'*';<'«,'«'>> become troubled, conl newly born animal, neut. of e/j/Spvoc,
2. f!^lA or' soiled,
fused, growing in,
produce or form in needlework, as a flower, a later and mod. F. embrouiUer "' '?• +/P''fn'r swell, be full.] I.
i «. 1 The
cipher, etc.: as, to embroider silver stars
on
(= Sp. embrollar =
Pg. embrulhar It. imbro- = fecundated germ of an animal in its earlier
gltare), entangle, confuse, stages of development, and
velvet.
ler, confuse, jumble:
embroil, < en- brouil- + before
sumed the distinctive form and structure
it has as-
The whole ChappeU covered on the ontside with see broilKl 1. To mix of the
cloth up or entangle; intermix confusedly;
of Tissue the gift, as appeareth by the arms
itnbroydered involve.
:
. "»"pna o-
'"'^ tmbrvidery of the meadows were helpt embroudet, embrowdet, v. t. Middle English Darwin, Descent of Man, I. 31.
**
•nli'i™''
"^ vanant.s of embroid.
2.1 i,??^""^ '•'' "*• »,
own
"»•«" 'n»ke a pretty land- 2. In 6o<., the rudimentary plant contained in
So. 4U. embrown (em-broun'),
skip of lita posMsaiona. Spectator,
im- V. [Formerly also the seed, the result of the action of pollen
upon
4. In her., a hill or mount with several copines brown; m-l + brotcn. Cf. Of/emhrunir,
< the ovule, it may be so rudimentary
as to have anna-
f'llls.-
darken,make brown or blackish, < en- -t- brun ren t ly no distinct ion of parts : but even h. its sbnpTest
t«,"'^?J"^
alUe,
Canadian, chaln-stltch, che-
brown.] I. trans. 1. To make brown fom
elotli. cordovan embrolde:^"^.- »f « 'i'lRle internode of an a.vis, which
.''"t|'«'ly
thr^,.,iift darken! ; irZ germination
upon iif develops at oneextremity a leaf or
iefv''l^t"h^JF"^='°'?
dery
embroldeiy,a kind of embrol H hence summer suns embroum the labouring with a temnnal bud, a.id a root at the other. leaves
In which pieces of cloth cut in tiie swains. In more de-
shape of leaves Fenton, To Mr. Southern. veloped embryos this initial internode
flower., etc., are sewed upon
a foundation the whole bi or caulicle (often
ing MsUted by decoratl™ edging
l"«Snd the Mke hi 2. To make dark or obscure. '='".'*'' ?''''^''> '«^''™ "t »"« end
two o? me
Z:^^:^!'
Where the unpierced shade E^w^','"™'?'"'' '?""' ''""'"^ '"tyledons, and often aii
uanish embroldvT. See DonuA.— """!"'"• Also called .ffem,. By recent au-
dery, a kind of embrolderv in which a Darned embroi- Imbroum'd the noontide bowers. lKf~U
thors J"
the term is also applied to the developed
wmewhat
-— - - —
open textile
"i-^.. inunc IS
V.--W.C fabric
backgn-uml^ a
fllk-,1 in ny
is niicfi by ttie
tl," """.He
needle with
n. intrans. To grow
Milton, P. L., It. 246. vascular cryptogams. See cuts under
oosiwre in
albumen and cotytc.
^,^^1^!^
"' '^
^ ""''« » ""Ihi and opa-,ue snrfLe n
^" " especially ied f.V wLh quire a brownish hue.
or become brown; ac- 3. The beginning or first state of anything,
aW.wP",
embrom';;^'."'
""^L*"-
Ji:f.S:,r'"" acmng-
"" -«"— «nH" ilj^'f ''''/'I'? *r^'' meanwhile, there were ... signs
while yet in a rude and undeveloped
the condition of anything which has
condition
embroidery-frame (em-broi'd6r-i-fram), n. A JwJ^"'" "' *.'"' Summer: the darkening foliage
i^e been con-
embrowmng grtia. t<msr/««ow, Kavanagf, xvlli ceived but IS not yet developed or executed
frame on which material to be embroidered
is
«™^™|W (em-br8'), rudimentary state: chiefly in the phrase in em-
fastened and stretched, so that
it may not be
v. t. An obsolete spelling bryo.
drawn in the working.
embroideiT-needle (era-broi'd*r-i-ne'dl), «. embrute (em-brdf), ; pret. and pp. embruted,
v. There were Items of such a Treaty being in
Emhrio
Auv one of various large needles or implements ppr embruUng. [Formeriy also imbrute Congrene, Way of the Worid 9
; < em-i I
+
brute.-] I. trans. To degrade to the condi-
01 iiKe character used in ornamental
needle- tion of a brute; make brutal or
like a brute:'
i^'iTSli "*"" ""'^'«* "'^'" * »»"•<' """ij^;'
Cder?^li^"?''*',P""'*«««*- The chenille em- brutalize. A little bench of heedless bishops here.
«*<"''• '"' •*> »">• ewvas. ii All the man embruted And there a chancellor in embryo.
in the swine.
mSJivT^n',"' Tl""!^
""' eye .nearly a. large a. in the Caxcthumc, Regulation of the Passions. Shemtone, Schoolmistress.
fonmT Knr ™i'' "l"^
-.ml .i?!^"'"^'!'""'' "?
•""<• ""terial. tlie needle Is Mix'd with liestial slime. Eplspermlc embryo. See ep»»j«nntc. =
thl
"•"» eye Genn,ltud,ment TheflrstofthesewordsismaiWaim svn. Fetun
•Jl''.t!" » '""?
''•'T'' for cnwhet-
an
jnd ,.,
tamlwur-work
, ; This Msence to incarnate and imbrute. liS
the «>.caired needle U in reality • That to the highth of deity aspired to the embryos of viv parous
vertcl,rates in thriateisCS
of their development, when they are more
Mil\ton, P. L., Ix. 186. subject to ob-
servation. Oenn means especially the
seed or fecundated
embryo 1896 amendatory
ormn, and scarcely exteiuU beyoinl tlie early stages of an embryonal (em'bri-on-al), a. [< embryon + the
Contemplation generates
the latter
; action propagates. Without
defective ; without the last the fli-st
embno. Jiiuliment is simply "le specillc upiilicution of -dl. Tliis and the following forms in embryon-
fii-st is
a more general term to a germ or to the eaily, crude, or is but abortive and embryous. Feliham, Kesolves, i. 14.
•rude" stages of an embryo. are ctymologically improper, being based on
the erroneous (NL.) stem embryon- instead of
emburset, v. t. See imbnrse.
H. Being in the first or rudimentary stage
(I. embushf, ''. An obsolete form of ambush.
the proper stem embry-, embryo-.'] Of or per-
of growth or development incipient embry- An obsolete form of ambush-
taining to an embryo, or to the embryonic stage embushmentt,
; ; n.
onic as, an embryo flower.
: men t.
of an organism.
The finhnio manor of the German tribesman, with its To the cete unsene thay soghte at the gayneste.
village of serfs upon it, might therefore, if the same prac-
Embryonal masses of protoplasm. Bastian.
And sett an enbuiichement, als theme-selfe lykys.
tice prevailed, differ in three ways fi-om the later manor. The arms of men and apes, the fore legs of quadrupeds, Morte Arthure (E. E. T. S.), 1. 3110.
Sfebohm, Eng. Vil. Community, p. 341. the paddles of cetacea, the wings of birds, and the breast-
embusyt (em-biz'i), r. t. [Early mod. E. em-
fins of fishes are structurally identical, being developed
Embryo buds, in bot, the hard no<lules which occur in from the same embryonal rudiments. besy, enbesy; < em-l + busy.] To employ; keep
the bark of the Iwecli, olive, and other trees, and are ca- J. Fiske, Cosmic Philos., I. 460. busy.
llable of developing leaves and shoots.
Embryonal vesicle, in hot., the germ-cell within the In nedyll warke raysyng byrdes in iKiwres,
embryoctony (em-bri-ok'to-ni), n. [< Gr. l,u-
embryo-sac which after fertilization is developed into the With vertue enbeaetl all tyraes and howres.
fipmv, an embryo, + destroy.]
-ktovIo, < ktcIvciv,
enibr.vo. Also called oot^/here. Skelton, Garland of Laurel.
In obstet., the destruction of the fetus lu the embryonary (em'bri-on-a-ri), o. [< embryon Whilst thus in battell they embuaied were.
uterus, as in cases of impossible delivery. -fl)')/-.]
-t- Same as embryonal. [Rare.] Spenser, F. Q., IV. vii. 29.
embryogenic (em'bri-o-jen'ik), a. Pertaining embryonate, embryonated (em'bri-on -at, emcristenet, n. A Middle English contracted
to embryogeny. -a-ted), (I. [< embryon -I- -afcl, -ated.] In the form of even-christian.
embryogeny (em-bri-oj'e-ni), n. [< 6r. f,«- state of or formed an embryo relating to
like ; The kyndenesse that myn emcristene kydde me fern sere^
fipim; an embryo, +
-ycveia, < -yevt/^, produ- an embryo ;
possessing an embryo. Syxty sitlie ich sleuthe haue for-gute hit sitthe.
cing see -geny.'} The formation and develop-
:
Piers Plowman (C), vlii. 46.
St. Paul could not mean this embryonated little plant,
ment of the embryo that department of sci-
;
for lie could not denote it by these words, "that which emeti « A Middle English form of earn. Chau-
ence which treats of such formation and devel- thou sowest," for that, he says, must die ; but this little cer.
opment. embiyonated plant contained in the seed that is sown dies emeer, «. See emir.
not. Locke, Second Reply to Bp. of Worcester.
Taxonomy ought to be the expression of ancestral de- emellt, emelf, prep. See imell.
embryonic (em-bri-on'ik), a. [< embryon
velopment, or phyloijeuy, as well as of eiiibrt/ofrenif and + emembratedt (e- mem 'bra -ted), a. [< ML.
adult structui-e. Huxley, Encyc, Brit., II. 49. -('(.] Having the character or being in the con- emembratus, pp. of emembrare, exmembrare, de-
embryogony (em-bri-og'o-ni), H. [< 6r. iji- dition of an embryo pertaining or relating to ; prive of members, < L. e, ex, out, + membrum,
fipvov, an embryo, +
-yovia, generation, < -ynvo(, an embryo or embryos hence, rudimentary ; ; member.] Gelded. Bailey, 1727.
producing, generating: see -gony.] Same as incipient inchoate : as, an embryonic animal, ; emend (e-mend'), V. t. [The same as amend,
embryogeny. germ, or cell ; embryonic development or re- which is ultimately, while emend is directly,
embryograph (em'bri-o-gr&f), n. [< Gr. i/i- searches ; an embryonic scheme ; civilization is from the L. F. emender
: = Pr. emendar = =
jipvov, embryo, +
ypa^iv, write.] An instru- in an embryonic state. Sp. Pg. emendar =
It. emendare, < L. emendare,
ment consisting of an ordinary microscope com- At what particular phase in the embryonic series is the correct, amend: see amend.] 1. To remove
bined with a camera lucida for the purpose of soul witli its potential consciousness implanted'/ is it in faults or blemishes from free from fault alter ; ;
accurately drawing the outlines of embryos and the egg? in the fcetus of this month or of that? in the for the better; correct; amend. [Rare.]
new-lwrn infant? or at five years of age?
series of sections thereof, it is also used to recon- E. R. Lankcater, Degeneration, p. 68, note B. A strong earthquake would shake them to a chaos,
struct minute morphological and histological details on fi'om wliich the successive force of the sun, rather thau
a large scale from series of microscopic sections. It was embryonically (em-bri-on'i-kal-i), adv. As re- creation, bath a little eviended them.
invented hy I'rof. His of Leipsic. gards an embryo ; as or for an embryo ; in an Feltham, Low Countries, ii.
bryugruiih + -ic. ] Drawn or graphically i-epre- the reading of: as, this edition of Virgil is
Tlie dorsal or posterior fissure is formed . about the . .
sented by means of the embryograph. seventh day, and accompanies the atrophy of tile . . .
greatly emended.
embryography (em-bri-og'ra-fi), n. [< Gr. e//- dorsal section of the embryonicnlly large canal of the spi- He [DUbner, in his edition of Arrlan] confines himself
jipvov, an embryo, +
-ypa(l>la, < ypd^eiv, write.] nal cord. M. Foster, Embryology, i. 255. almost exclusively to emending such forms, etc. as are in- ,
That department of auatomy which describes embryoplastic (em'^'bri-o-plas'tik), a. [< Gr. consistent with Arrian's own uniform usage in this same
piece. Amer. Jour. PhiloL, VII. 204.
the embryo or treats of its development. (fjiipvov, embryo, -1- Tr/aoTof, < v'/aaaciv, form.]
= S5T1. Improve, Better, etc. See amend.
embryologic, embryological (em"bri-o-loj'ik, Pertaining to the formation of the embryo.
-i-kal), a. Of or pertaining to embryology. emendable (e-men'da-bl), a. [< L. emendabiHs,
embryo-sac (em'bri-6-sak), n. [< Gr. ep-jipvov, < emendare, emend: see emend. Cf. amendable.']
Tlie homologies of any being, or group of beings, can embryo, + aduKoi;, Jj.gaceus, sac] 1. In bot.,
Capable of being emended or corrected.
be most surely made out by tracing their embryological the reproductive cell of the ovule in phanero-
development, when that is possil)le. emendals (e-men'(la,\z),n.pl. l<. emend + -al.'j —
gams, containing the embryonal vesicle. 2. In the Society of tlie Inner Temple, London,
Darwin, Fertil. of Orchids by Insects, p. 233.
In conch., same as protoconch. England, a balance of money in the bank or
embryologically (em'bri-o-loj'i-kal-i), adv. embryoscope (em'bri-o-skop), «. [< Gr. l/i- stock of the houses, for the reparation of losses
According to or as regards the laws or princi- jipmv, embryo, + okottcIi', look at.] An instru-
or other emergent occasions.
ples of embryology. ment which is attached to an egg for the pur- emendatelyt (e-men'dat-U), adv. [< *emen-
Is the hyppolais a warbler etmbryologically, or is he a pose of examining the embryo, a part of the
diitc, adj., + -hfi, after L. adv. emendate, fault-
yellow finch, connected with serins and canaries, who has shell being tirst removed, and the opening so
Kingdey, Life, II. 203. lessly, correctly, < emendatus, pp. of emendare,
taken to singing? made being hermetically closed by the appa- correct, emend: see emend.] Without fault;
embryologist (em-bri-ol'o-jist), n. [< embry- ratus, which has a glass disk in the middle correctly.
ology + -i.si.] One who studies embryos; one through which the development of the germ The prynters herof were very desirous to have the Bi-
versed in the principles and facts or engaged during the first few days of its growth may be ble come forth as faultlesse and emendatly as the shortnes
in the study of embryology. watched. of tyme for the recognysing of the same wold require.
embryoscopic em- Taverner, Dedication to the King (Bible, 1539).
(em'''bri-o-skop'ik), a. [<
embryology (em-bri-ol'o-ji), n. [< Gr. Ifijipv-
ov, an embryo, + -loyia, < ?Jytiv, speak : see bryoscope + -ic] Pertaining to the examina- emendation (em-en- or e-men-da'shon), «. [=
-ology.] That department of science which re- tion of embryos by means of the embryoscope. OF. emendation, F. emendation = Pr. Sp. emen-
lates to the development of embryos. embryotega (em-bri-ot'e-ga), n. [NL., also dacion It. emeyidasione ; < L. cmendatio(n-), < =
embryon (em'bri-on), n. and a. [Formerly embryotegium, < Gr. i/ifipvov, the embryo, + emendare, pp. emendatus, eoiTeet, emend: see
also embrion ; < F. embryon: see embryo.l I. reyog, a roof.] In bot., a small callosity near emend.] 1. The removal of errors the correc- ;
In embrion. B. Jonson, Alchemist, ii. 1. emitting the radicle. The longer he lies in his sin without repentance or emen.
embryothlasta (em"bri-o-thlas'ta), n. [NL., dation. Jer. Taylor.
The reverence I owe to that one womb
In which we both were embrions, makes me suffer < Gr. iufSpvov, the embryo, + ffkaaro^, verbal adj. The question By what machinery does experience at
;
cerned with the work of emending or correct- from an eclipse; to emerge from poverty, ob- protruding.
ing; amendatory. scurity, or misfortime. That love that, when my state was now quite sunk.
Thetis, not unmindful of her son, Came with thy wealth and weighed it up again,
He had what is the first requisite to emendatory criti- Emerrfintj from the deep, to beg her boon. And made my emergent fortune once more look
cism, that intuition by whicli the Poet's intention is im- Dryden, Above the main. B. Jonson, Catiline, i. 1.
Johttson, Pref. to Shalt Pursued their track. Iliad, i.
mediately discovered.
Tlie mountains huge appear
Then from ancient gloom emerged
emender (e-men'der), n. One who emends. A rising world. Thomson.
Emergent, and their broad bare backs upheave
Into the clouds. Milton, P. L., vii. 286.
emendicatet (f-men'di-kat), r. t. [< L. emendi-
Through the trees we glide.
c<ittu^,pp. of cmeiidicare, obtain by begging, < Emerging on the green hill-side. Glimpses of temple-fronts emergent. on green hill-slopes
e, out, mendicarc, beg: see viendmoit.1 To
+ M. Arnold, Resignation. among almond-trees.
J. A. Symonds, Italy and Gi-eece, p. 187.
beg. Coekeram. Many of the univalves here at San Lorenzo were filled
emerald (em 'e-rald), n. and a. [The term, alter- and united together by pure salt, probably left by the Specifically —
(a) In bryology, rising slightly above the
perichfetium applied to the capsule. (6) In lichenology,
formerly also emerant, evaporation of the sea-spray, as the land slowly emerged. :
Go it would, as fast as one man could convey it in speech This is an elementary text-book, ... on the mainte-
large crystals, though of less value as genu, in Siberia,
to another all the town over it being usually observed nance of health, with the rudiments of anatomy and
and in Alexander county, Xorth Carolina. ;
[Rare.]
Waa set with emeraudg one and one. gen{t-)s, ppr.: see emergent, a.] 1. The act of H. That which emerges or comes forth;
n.
Flower and Leaf, I. 142.
rising from or out of that which covers or con- that which appears or comes into view a nat- ;
2. The name in Great Britain of a size of print- ceals ; a coming forth or into view. ural occurrence. [Bare.]
ing-type, intermediate between minion (which We have read of a tyrant who tried to prevent the emer- No particular emergent or purchase to be employed to
is larger) and nonpareil (which is smaller), gence of murdered bodies. Sir T. Browne, Vulg. Err. any seuerall proflte. vntill the common stocke of the com-
and measuring 138 lines to the foot. It is not The white colour of all refracted light, at its very first panie shall be furnished. Uakluyt's Voyages, I. 228.
used in the United States. 3. In entom., one — emergence, ... is compounded of various colours.
Xewton, Opticks.
There are many ways in which the properties of a mass
from those of its molecules; the chief of these is,
of several small green geometrid moths, as the differ
The sulphate of lime may have been derived from that some properties are emergents, not resultants.
grass emerald, Pseudoterpna pruinata, and the . . .
the evaporation of the sea-spray during the emergence of G. H. Lems, Probs. of Life and Mind, II. iv. § 49.
Essex emerald, Phorodesmn smarniidiiriii—Tixa- the land. Darwin, GeoL Ob8er\'ation8, iL 273.
erald-green. •Seeyr«<n.—Llthlaemer£Lld."r emerald emergently (e-m6r'jent-li), adv. As occasion
gpodumeud, an emerald-green variety of siMxtuniciit-, also 2. In hot, an outgrowth or appendage upon demands; on emergence by emergency. ;
called hiddeniu, from Alexander county, North Carolina.
the surface of an organ, as the prickles and whetherof case or person, are to be con-
Tlie particulars,
It is used as a gem.
n. a. Of a bright green, like emerald. glandular hairs of roses. 3t. An emergency; — sidered occasionally and emergently by the judges.
Jer. Taylor, Works (ed. 1835), II. 387.
exigency.
My sliding chariot stays. But let the enurgenee be passed wlien they need my The state
Thick set with agate, and the aznm sheen emergentness (e-mfer'jent-nes), n.
0( tarkis blue and emerald green. head and hand, and they only know me as son of the or quality of being emergent. [Rare.]
obscure portioner of Glendearg. Scott, Abbot, iii.
MUtoH, Comas, L a»4. emeril (em'e-ril), n. [Earlier form of emery,
That vast expanse of emerald meadow. Maemlay. emergency (e-mfer'jen-si), n. and a. [As emer- q. v.] If. Emery.
gence : see -enee, -ency.'] I. n. pi. emergencies Wliose [Jersey's] venom-hating ground
Thro' which tbe lights, rose, amber, emerald, bine, ;
Klush'd. Tennj/mm, Palace of Art. (-siz). If. Same as emergence, 1. hath, which thou aliroad dost send.
The hard'ned emeril
Drayton, Polyolbion, i. 63.
Emerald copper. Bee diofitaae.— Emerald IBIe, Ireland Tbe emergency of colours, upon coalition of the particles 2. A
glaziers' diamond.
so called from Terdare. The epithet is said to have
its of such bodies as were neither of them of the colour of that
been first applied to it by Dr. William Drennan of Bel- mixture whereof they are Ingredients, is very well worth emeritedt (e-mer'i-ted), a. [< L. emeritus, hav-
fast, in the lieidnning of the nincteinth century, in his our attentive observation. Boyle, Colours. ing served out one's time : see emeritus.] Re-
poem called " Erin. '— Emerald nlckeL See nickel. tired from the public service after serving a full
emerald-flsh (em'c-rald-fish), n. A fish, Gobi-
2. A sudden or unexpected happening; an im- term.
ondlus oeeanicus, witfi a short, anteriorly con- foreseen occurrence or condition; specifically,
a perplexing contingency or complication of I had thehonour to lay one of the first foundation stones
vex head, and with a faint dusky streak along of that royal structure, erected for the reception and en-
circumstances.
the sides, a dark bar below the eye, and a bright- couragement of emerited and well-deserving seamen.
blue and greenwh tongue exhibiting reflections Most of our rarities have been found out by casual aner- Evelyn, III. vii. f 15.
gency. Glanmlle, Vanity of Dogmatizing, xix.
like an emerald. It is found in the Caribbean emeritus (e-mer'i-tus), a. and n. [L. emeritus,
sea and the gulf of Mexico. A man mnst do according to accidents and Emergencies. having served out one's time (originally ap-
Selden, Table-Talk, p. 116.
emeraldine (em'e-ral-din), n. [< emerald + plied to a soldier or public functionary who
The uncertainty and ignorance of things to come makes
-iH*'-.] In dyeing, a dark-green color produced the world new unto us by unexpected emergencies. had served out his time and retired from the
on fabrics printed with aniline black, by treat- Sir T. Browne, Christ. Mor., i. 25. public service); as a noun, one who has served
ing the pieces with acids before the black has The emergency which has convened the meeting is usu- out his time, pp. of emereri, serve out one's
been completely developed. ally of more importance than anything the debaters have time, also obtain by service, < e, out, mereri, +
emerald-moth (em'e-rald-mdth), n. A moth of in their minds, and therefore becomes imperative to
Emerson, Eloquence.
serve, earn, merit: see merit.] I. a. Having
them.
tlio genus Ilipparchug, or some related genus: served out one's time; having done sufficient
so culled from the grass-green color. 3. A sudden or unexpected occasion for action service ; discharged with honor from the per-
emerant (em'e-rant), n. and a. An obsolete or exigency ; pressing necessity. formance of public duty on account of infirmity,
dialectal (Scotcli') variant of emerald. In any case of emergency he would employ the whole age, or long service, but retained on the rolls :
wealth of his empire. Addison, Freeholder.
As still was her look, and as still was her ee. as, a professor emeritus; a rector emeritus.
As tbe stlllneM that lay on the emerant lea. 4t. Something not calculated upon; an unex- Even after he [Josiah Quincy] had passed ninety, he
Hogg, Qneen's Wake, Bonny Kilmeny. pected gain a casual profit.
; would not claim to be emeritus, but came forward to brace
his townsmen with a courage and warm them with a fire
emerase (em'e-ris), piece of armor for
fi. A The rents, profits, and emergencies belonging to a Bishop younger than their own. Lowell, Study Windows, p. 97.
the shoulder or arm, probably the gusset of the of Bath and Wells. Ileylin, Life of Laud, p. 159.
armpit. =Syn. 3. Crisis, etc. (see exigency); pinch, strait. n. ». ; pi. emeriti (-ti). '1. In Rom. hist., a
emeraud'f, emerande^t, "• and a. Obsolete Pertaining to or provided for an emer- soldier or public functionary who had served
U. a.
forms of i-mi raid. gency; dealing with or for use in emergencies: out his time and retired from service. Such
See emerod^. as, an emergency man an emergency wagon. servants were entitled to some remuneration
emeraad'-t, emeraude^t,
emerge (<)-ra6rj'), v. ; pret.
n.
and pp. emerged, ppr.
;
emerod 1898
n.pl. as Emesincc. emicationt (em-i-ka'shon), n. [< L. emicatio{n-),
Same
« hemorrhoid see hemorrhoid.'i Obsolete forms Emesida (e-mes'i-da),
:
+ < emicare, break forth :' see etnicant]
[NL., < Emesa spar- A
Emesidae (e-mes'i-de), n. 2>l.
of hemorrhoid. kling a flying off in small particles or sparks,
The men that died not were smitten with the tmerods. -ida'.} A family of heteropterous insects, of the I
be overthrown. L. emeticus, < Gr. c/ieriKdg, causing vomit, < ifie- the country from which the movement takes
2. In astron. : (a) The reappearance of a heav- Toc, vomiting, < iftelv (/ Fe/i-)
• =
L. vomere, vom- place. See immigrant.— 2. Pertaining to emi-
enly body after an eclipse or occultation; also, it: see vomit.] I. a. Induciug vomiting. gration or emigrants as, an emigrant ship.
:
The Century, XXVII. 930. cause to vomit. Also spelled <?»ie<ic«se. [Bare.] grated, ppr. emigrating. [< L. emigratus, pp.
Emesa (em'e-sa), n. [NL. (Fabricius, 1803), < L. Phacochoerus (elhiopicus. It is doubtful whether there is any
addition caused by
Emesa, Gr. "Efl'eaa, a city of Syria, now Hews.] emicantt (em'i-kant), a. [< L. emican( t-)s, ppr. emigration of white corpuscles from the blood-vessels.
The typical genus of the family Emesidw. E. of emicare, break forth, spring out, become con- Proc. Jloy.Soc.,XX\\ ill. 91.
longipes is a common species in the United spicuous, < e, out, + micare, quiver, sparkle emigrational (em-i-gra'shon-al), a. [< emigra-
see mica.] Beaming forth; sparkling; flying tion + -al] Relating to emigration.
e'mesid (em'e-sid), a. and n. I. a. Pertaining off like sparks issuing rapidly. ;
emigrator (em'i-gra-tor), n. [< emigrate + -or.]
to or having the characters of the family Eme-
fauna. P. Here thou almighty vigour didst exert An emigi-ant. [Rare.] . ,-. ,
sidw : as, an emssid bug an ; emesid Which emicant did this and that way dart. 6migr6 (a-me-gra'), n. [F., pp. oi emtgrer,
<.
£. Uhler. Through the black bosom of the empty space. emigrare, emigrate: see emigrate.] An emi-
Sir H. Blackmore, Creation, vii. L.
n, n. One of the Emesid<e.
! ;; :
; ; ;
1789. high; lofty. [Now rare.] emirate (e-mer'at), n. [< etnir + -ate^.] The
A decree of the convention had issued against Talley- Thys Jherusalem ys a ffayer Emynent Place,
Citie of office or rank of an emir.
rand during his stay in England. He was an imigri. for it stondith vpon suche a grounde. That from whens so emissarium (em-i-sa'ri-um), ». pi. emissaria ;
Eneyc. BrU., XXIII. 31. ever a man comyth ther he must nedys ascende. (-a). [NL., neut. of L. emissarius, taken in lit.
Torkington, Diarie of Eng. Travell, p. 37.
Emilian (e-mil'ian), a. [< It. Emilia (see def .), sense: see emissary.] In anat., an emissary
so called from tHe Via Emilia, < L. Via JSmilia, Both sides of the Kings Chariot were adorned with (def. II., 3); specifically, an emissary vein.—
Images of gold and siluer two being most eminent among
a road (an extension of the Via Flaminia) which them the one, of Peace, the other, of Warre.
;
Emissarium Santorlnl, or emissarium parietale.
;
emissary veins, under emissary.
.See
traversed the heart of Cisalpine Gaul, built by Purchae, Pilgrimage, p. 373.
M. JEmilius Lepidus, Roman consul, 187 B. C] Mischief, 'gainst goodness aim'd,
emissary (em'i-sa-ri), a. and n. [= F. ^issaire
Relating or pertaining to Emilia, a comparti-
is like a stone.
Unnaturally forc'd up an eminent hill, = Sp. emisario =
Pg. It. emissaria, n., < L. emis-
Whose weight fails on our heads and l)unes us. sarius, sent out (as adj., first in LL.), as a noun,
mento or general geographical division of the
kingdom of Italy, lying north of the Apennines Fletcher {and another). Queen of Corinth, iv. 4. a scout, spy, emissary, inLL. also an attendant,
The two children < L. emittere, pp. emissus, send out: see emit.]
and south of the Po, and named from the an- tumbled laughing over the
. . .
grassy mounds wWch were too eminent for the short legs 1. a. 1. Emittmg; sending out; fvimishing an
cient Via .Emilia, or Emilian Way, which
passes through it. It comprises the northern
to i>e8tride. Haivthome, Doctor Grimshawe, i. outlet. —
2. Of or pertaining to one sent on a
2. High
in rank, office, worth, or public esti- mission; exploring; spying.
part of the former Papal States (the Romagna)
and the former duchies of Parma and Modena. mation conspicuous ; highly distinguished
; You shall neither eat nor sleepe
eminence (em'i-nens), «. [= D. eminentie G. = said of a person or of his position as, an emi- : No, nor forth your window peepe
With your emissarie eye.
einiitenz =
Dan. eminence =
Sw. eminens, < OF. nent station; an eminent historian or poet. It
B. Jonson, Underwoods, No. 8.
eminence, F. eminence =
Pr. Sp. eminencia It. = is rarely used in a bad sense.
Emissary veins (emissaria Santorini), the veins travers-
eminema, < L. eminentia, excellence, promi- Censure is the tax a manpays to the public for being ing the cranial walls, and connecting the veins on the
nence, < eminett{t-)s, excellent, prominent, emi- eminent. Swift, Thoughts on Various Subjects. outside of the skull with the sinuses of the dura mater.
nent: see eminent.'] 1. A part rising or pro- These objections, though sanctioned by eminent names, n.n. ; pi. emissaries (-riz). 1. person sent A
jecting beyond the rest or above the surface originate, we venture to say, in profound ignorance of the on a mission, particularly a private mission or
art of poetry. Macaulay.
something protuberant or prominent a pro- ; business an agent employed for the promotion
;
jection : as, the eminences on or in an animal 3. Conspicuous; such as to attract attention of a cause or of his employer's interests now :
body. See phrases below, and em i«e«t»a. manifest: as, the judge's charge was charac- commonly used in a bad or contemptuous sense,
They must be smooth, almost imperceptible to the terized by eminent fairness; an eminent exam- and usually implying some degree of secrecy or
touch,and without either eminence or cavities. ple of the vincertainty of circumstantial evi- chicanery.
Dryden, tr. of Dufresnoy's Art of Painting. dence. P. jun. What are emissaries f
whom last
Specifically 2. — A
conspicuous place or situ-
Those
In triumph and luxurious wealth are they
thou saw'st The.
To fetch
Men employed outward,
in the commodity.
that are sent abroad
ation; a prominent position; especially, a hUl First seen in acts of prowess eminetU
B. Jonson, Staple of News, 1. 1.
or height of ground affording a wide view. And great exploits. Milton, P. L, li. 789.
Its [popery's] emissaries are very numerous, and very
Aa he had he died in public expired upon a
lived, so ; The avenging principle within us wiil certainly do its busy in corners, to seduce the unwary.
cross, on the top of an eminence near Jerusalem. duty upon any eminent breach of ours, and make every Bp. Atterbury, Sermons, I. xv.
Bp. Atterbury, Sermons, II. L flagrant act of wickedness, even in this life, a p.tnishment
to itself. Bp. Atterbury, Sermons. II. xvi. Christian communities send forth their emissaries of
The temple of honour ought to l>e seated on an emi- religion and letters.
nence. 4. Supreme; controlling; unrestrained by high-
Burke. D. Webster, Speech at Plymouth, Dec. 22, 1820.
or authority chiefly in the phrase ewii-
3. IHevation as regards rank, worth, accom- er rignt :
2. An
outlet for water; a channel by which
plishment, etc. ; exalted station or repute ««i( ffomain (which see, under domain). = %ya. 1.
Klevated.— 2. Illuetrunu, Renowned, etc. See/amotw. water is drawn from a lake : as, the emissary of
more generally, a high degree of distinction in
eminentia (em-i-nen'shi-S), n. ; pi. eminentice
any respect, good or bad as, to attain eminence (-«). [L., eminence: see e;«mc?iee.]
the Alban lake. —
3. In anat., that which emits
:
In o«o<., or sends out ; a vessel through which excretion
in a profession, or in the annals of crime. takes place; an excretory or emunctory: chiefly
an eminence ; a prominence ; a protuberance.
The eminence of tlie Apostles consistetl in their power- — Eminentia capltata, tlie head of a l)one speciflcally, ;
used in the plural. Also emissarium. =syn. 1. Spy,
ful! preaching, their unwearied laliouring in the Word, the radial head of the humerus. Also called capiteltum Emissary. A spy is one wlio enters an enemy's camp or
their unquenchable cltarity. and eapUulum. See cut under eapite.llum — P.mtnftnt.in enemy an emis.
territories to learn tlie condition of the ;
Milton, On Def. of Humb. B«monst. dnerea, the lower prominent portion of the ala cinerea. sary may be a secret agent employed not only to detect
High on • throne of royal state . . . — BmtnffTi t ^ iliopectinea, tlie ilioi>ectineal eminence.
i the schemes of an opposing party, but to influence their
Satan exalted sat, by merit raJaed —Eminentia Intercondylea, the spine of the titiia.— councils. A spy in war must conceal liis true character,
Eminentia paplllarla, pyramldalls, or atapedll. the or he may sutfer death if detected; an emissary may in
To that bad eminence. Milton, P. L., li. 6.
pyramid of the t jTii pan um.— Eminentia symphyBlB, some cases lie known as the agent of an adversary without
Where men cannot arrive at eminence, religion may tlie prominent lower iionier of the nii<iiile of tlie cliin, one incurring similar hazard.
make compensation by teaching content. TUlotton. marked features of man as distinguished from
of the most emissaryship (em'i-sa-ri-ship), n. [< emissary
other mammals. +
Whatever storms may rage in the lower regions of soci- -ship.] The office of an emissary. B. Jon-
ety, rarely do any clouds but clouds of incense rise to the eminential (om-i-nen'shal), a. [< eminence (L. son.
awful enunenee of the ttirone. Irving, Granada, p. 22. eminentia) -«/.] 1. Containing or pertain- +
emissilet, a. That may be cast or sent. Bailey,
4. Supreme degree. [Rare,] ing to something eminently. 2. In anat., per-
nil. —
taining to an eminentia prominent or protu- =
Whatever pure thou in the \xAy enjoy'st emission (f-mish'on), n. [= F. Mission ;
Sp.
(And pure tiwu wert create<l), we enjoy berant.— Eminential equation, an equation which by emision =" Pg. etnissSo It. emissione, < L. =
In eminence. MxUon, V. L, viU. 624. means of indeterminate coelhcients expresses several in-
dependent equations. emissio(n-), a sending out, < emissus, pp. of
6. In the Rom. Cath. Ch., a title of honor at- eminently (em'i-nent-li), adv. 1. In an emi- emittere, send out: see emit.] 1. The act of
tached by a consistorial decree of 1630 exclu- nent degree ; in a manner to attract observa- emitting, or of sending or throwing out ; a put-
sively to cardinals and to the master of the tion so as to be conspicuous and distinguished ting forth or issuing: as, the emission of light
;
Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem: osnally from others: as, to be eminently learned or use- from the sun or other luminous body the emis- ;
with a capital. ful. sion of steam from a boiler ; the emission of pa-
His Eminence was Indeed very fond of his poet. They in whomsoever these vertues dwell emirurUly need per money.
Bp. Uwrd, Notes oo Epistle to Angnstna. not Kings to make them happy, but are the architects of Because Philosophers may disagree
thir own happiness. Milton, Eikonoklastes, xxL If sight emission or reception be.
Louie (turns haughtily to the Cardinal). Enough
Shall it be thence inferr'd I do not see?
Your eminence must excuse a longer audience. The highest flames are the most tremulous ; and so are Dryden, Hind and Panther.
bulicft, Richelieu, Iv. the most noly and eminently religious persons more full of
Articular eminence of the temporal bone. Scearn'm- awfulneas and fear. Jer. Taylor, Works (ed. 1836), I. 72. Plants climb by three distinct means, by spirally twin-
lar. " Canine eminence. Scccarti'/w.— Collateraleml- ing,by clasping a support with their sensitive tendrils,
When two races, both low In the scale, are crossed, the and by the emission of aerial rootlets.
nence. ^f- rnU'if*-rnl. — Eminence of Doyere, in aunt., progeny seems to be eminently bad.
the small ••!fv:ttlMTi at th*? point <>f the musi-I.- tlln-r wliere Darwin, Origin of Species, p. 182.
Darwin, Var. of Animals and Plants, p. 21.
tile nfrvf-IllKT (.-nUTs tjie Harcoleinma. —
Illopectlneal 2. That which is emitted, or sent or thrown
eminence. Heeiifo^cfiiwo/. sByn. 1. Height, elevation. 2. As used by the older philosophical writers,
out.
eminency (em'i-nen-si), ». [Early mod. E. in the highest possible degree ; perfectly ; abso-
also eintneneie; as eminence: see -ence, -ency.] lutely ; in a sovereign manner : said especially An inflamed heap of stubble, glaring with great emis-
sions, and suddenly stooping into the thickness of smoke.
Same as «iinii0ii«0. [Now rare.] of the production of an, effect by a cause in- Jer. Taylor, Works (ed. 1835), I. 23.
The late moat grleTooa cruelties occasioned the finitely superior to it. —
. . .
Speciflcally (a) In finance, an amount or quantity of
writing of the endoaed letters to his majesty, and these emir (e-mer'), n. [Also written emeer, and, esp. any representative of value issued or put into circulation
other to yoor tmineney. Milton, To Cardinal Mazarin. in ref. to present rulers having this title, ameer, an issue ;the entire emission (of coin, bank-notes, or
as,
His emineneie alwue others hath made him a man of amir; =z D. G. Dan. Sw. emir F. emir Sp. = = the Iike)has i)een called in or redeemed; the first, second,
Worship, tor hce liad neuer beene prefer'd, but that hee
was worth thousands.
emir, amir Pg. emir =
It. emiro, < Turk, amir = and third emissions of United States notes issued during
the civil war. (b) In physiol., a discharge, especially an
Bp. Earte, Micro-cosroographle, An Alderman.
= Pers. Hind, amir, < Ar. amir, emir, a com- involuntary discharge, of semen.— Theory of emission,
mander, ruler, chief nobleman, prince: see Newton's theory of the nature of liglit as being an emis-
The glory and emineneie* of the Divine love, manifested
In the incarnation of the Word eternal.
ameer, and cf. admiral.] 1. Among Arabs and sion of particles from the luminous body. Also called
the i'orpvsi-idar theory. See light, and undtUatory theory,
Jer. Taylor, Worlts (ed. 1835), I. 28. other Mohammedan peoples, a chief of a family under luiiliflatory.
You are to t)ecome a l>ody politiclc, using amongst your- or tribe a ruling prince. See ameer.
;
emissitioust (em-i-sish'us), a. [< L. emissiUua,
selves civil Kovemment, and are not furnished with per- The book of Job shows that, long before letters and arts better emissicius, send out (oculi emissicii, pry-
sons of special pminency above the rest. were known to Ionia, these vexing questions were debated ing, spying eyes)j < emissus,
John Ilobineon, in Kew England's Memorial,
pp. of emittere,
p. 28. under the' tents of the Idmnean <?wiir«.
.
send out.] Looking or narrowly examining;
. .
-III/.] Emissive or raiiating power. [Rare.] fer, feci.] In patlioL, a disorder of menstrua- emoUitiont (em-o-lish'on), n. [< L. as if *emol-
The emiif^icity of a bwly for any radiation is equal to
litio(n-), < emollire, .soften : see emollient.] The
tion. Dunglison.
the absorptive power for the same radiation at any one act of relaxing or of making soft and pliable.
teniiwniture. Tait, Light, § 30!).
emmenological
(e-men-o-loj'i-kal), a. [< em-
[Rare.]
menologi/ +
-ic-al. ] Pertaining to emmenology.
emissory (em'i-so-ri), a. [< NL. as if *emis- emmenology (em-e-nol'o-ji), n. [< Gr. ififirfna, All lassitude is a kind of contusion and compression of
sorius, < ML. emissor, one who sends out, < L. menses (see emmenagogne), -loyia, < V.iytiv, + the parts —
and bathing and anointing give a relaxation
or f'inollition. Bacon, Nat. Hist., § 730.
emissus, pp. of emittere, send out.] Sending or speak: see-oU/gij.] That special branch of med,
conveying out ; emissive. emoUitivet (e-mol'i-tiv), a. and ». [< L. emol-
ieal science which deals with menstruation.
emit (e-mit')> '• '•; pret. and pp. emitted, emmer-goose (em'er-gos), n. Same as ember- litus,pp. of emollire, soften (see emollient), +
ppr. emitting. [= F. emettre Sp. emitir =
goose.
— E. -ire.] I. a. Tending to soften; emollient.
Pg. emittir =
It. emettere, < L. emittere, send
emmet (em'et), n. [Early mod. E. also emet, They enter likewise into those emollitire or lenitive
out, emit, < e, out, mittere, +
send: see mis- emot; < ME. emet, emete (also emote, emotte, em- piastres which are devised for the sores of the head.
Holland, tr. of Pliny, xxxvL 21.
sile, etc. Cf. admit, amit^, commit, demit^, de- molte, emattc, appar. simulating ME. forms of
mit^, dimit, permit, remit, transmit.'] 1. To send moth: see moth, mad^, maggot), earlier amete II, n. An
emollient.
forth; thrower give out; vent: as, fire emits (contr. amte, ample, ante, > mod. E. ant), < AS. The inisselto is a great emollitive ; for it softeneth, dis-
cussetli, and resolveth also hard tumors.
heat and smoke ; boiling water emits steam ceniete, uimette, *emete, an emmet, ant : see fur- Holland, tr. of Pliny, xxiv. 4.
the sun and stars emit light. ther under an (1, the common form of the word.] emolument (e-mol'u-ment), n. [= F. emolu-
The dying lamp feebly emits a yellow gleam. An ant. ment = Sp. Pg. It. emoltiniento, < L. emolu-
Goldsmith, The Bee, No. 4. The parsimonious emmet, provident
While yon sun emits his rays divine. Of future. ililtim, P. L., vii. 485. mentum, emolimentuni, effort, exertion, what is.
Mickle, tr. of Canioens's Lusiad, ii.
As well may the minutest Emmet say
gained by labor, profit, gain, < emoliri, effect,
A baker's oven, emittinff the usual fragrance of sour That Caucasus was rais'd to pave his Way. accomplish, < e, out, + moliri, exert oneself:
bread. Hawthorne, Marble Fatni, v. Prior, Solomon, i. see amolish, demolish.] 1. The profit arising
A Iwdy absorbs with special energy the rays which it emmet-hunter (em'et-hun'''t6r), n. A name of from office or employment; that which is re-
can itself emit. Tyndali, Light and Elect., p. 7S.
the wryneck, lynx torquilla. Montagu. [Lo- ceived as a compensation for services, or which
2. To let fly; discharge; dart or shoot. [Rare.] cal, Eng.] is annexed to the possession of office, as salary,
Pay sacred Rev"reuce to Apollo's Song; emmetrope (em'e-trop), «. [As emmetro}}-ia.] fees, and perquisites.
Lest wrathful the far-shooting God emit A persou with eyes normal as regards refrac- The deanery of Christ Church became vacant.
was, both in dignity and in emolument, one of the
That
His fatal Arrows. office
tion.
Prior, tr. of Second Hymn of Callimachus. higliest in the University of Oxford.
emmetropia (em-e-tro'pi-a), «. [NL., < Gr. Macaulay, Hist. Eng., vi.
3. To issue, as an order or a decree ; issue for m
measure, proportional (< iv, in, -t-
e/ifierpoi;
2. Profit; advantage; gain in general; that
circulation, as notes or bills of credit. Herpop, measure), + uip (ut-), eye.] Normal
That a citation be valid, it ought to be decreed and power of accommodation, in which the light
which promotes the good of any person or
emitted by the judge's authority. Ayliffe, Parergon. thing.
from a luminous point at any distance from the
No state shall emit bills of credit. Profits by salt pits, niilles, water-coiirses (and whatso-
. . .
eye not less than 10 or 12 centimeters (3.9 or euer emoluments grew liy tlieni), and such like.
Constitution of United Slates, Art. § 10. i.
4.7 inches) can be focused to a point on the ret- Holinshed, Descrip. of England.
To emit a declaration, in Scots cHminal law, in tile ina, Also emmetropy. Nothing gives greater satisfaction than the sense of
case of a person suspected of liaving committed a crime,
to give an account of himself before a magistrate, usually emmetropic
(em-e-trop'ik), a. [As emmetro- having dispatched a great deal of business to tlie puidic
tile slieiitf, which account is taken down in writing and pia + -ic] Pertaining to or characterized by emolument. Tatter,
iiiiide use of at the tHal of the accused. emmetropia. Some of Mr. Wliitefield's enemies affected to suppose
emittent (f-mit'ent), a. and n. [< L. emit- that he would apply these collections to his own private
The 'state of refraction may deviate in two ways from emolument. Franklin, Autobiog., p. 167.
ten(t-)s, ppr. of elitittere, send out: see emit.] the emmetropic condition. ./. S. Wells, Dis. of Eye, p. 499.
Emitting; emissive. [Rare.] = Syn. 1. Remuneration, pay, wages, stipend, income.
I. a. The normal or emmetropic eye adjusts itself perfectly 2. Benefit.
H, n. One who or that which emits. for all <listances, from about Ave inches to infinity. It
makes a perfect image of objects at all these distances. emolumental (e-mol-ii-men'tal), a. [< emolu-
They did it [bleeding one animal into another] yester- ment -I-Producing profit
-«/.] useful; profit-
day before the society, very successfully also, upon a bull- Le Conte, Siglit, p. 47. ;
mastitf and a spaniel, the former being the emittent, the able; advantageous. [Rare.]
emmetropy (e-met'ro-pi), n. Same as emme-
other the recipient. Boyle, Works, VI. 237. The passion of his majesty to encourage his subjects in
tropia.
all that is laudable and truly emolumental of this nature.
emmanch6 (e-mon-sha'), a. [F., pp. of emman- The eye which we Iiave been speaking is the normal
of Evelyn, Sylva, To the Reader.
chcr, put a handle on, haft, ( en- + manche, a or perfect eye. This normal condition is called emmet-
handle, haft, =
Sp. Pg. mango It. manico, < = ropy. emongt, prep. An obsolete form of among.
Le Conte, Sight, p. 4(3.
ML. manicus (ef. equiv. dim. L. manicida), a emme'wt, immewt (e-, i-mii'), r. t. [< em-i, At last far off they many Islandes spy
handle, < L. manus, hand.] In her. (o) Hav- «/«-!, -f- mcw'-i.] To confine in a mew or cage
:
On every side floting the floodes emony.
Spenser, ¥. Q., II. xii. 10.
ing a handle said of a weapon, as an ax, when mew; coop up; cause to shrink out of sight.
:
the head and the handle or staff are of different Also enmew, inmew. emongstf emongestt, pre}}. Obsolete forms of ,
1. To cover as with a mantle; envelop; pro- As falcon doth the fowl,— is yet a devil. emonyt, " A corruption of anemone.
tect.
Shak., M. for >L, iii. 1.
emotion (f-mo'sbon), n. [= F. emotion Sp. =
The world, and this, which by another name men have emmonsite (em'on-zit), n. [After S. P. Em- cmocion =' Pg. emoqao It. emo:ione, < L. as if =
thought good to call heauen (under the pourprise and liend- mons, a geologist'.'] A
doubtful ferric tellurite *emoiio{n-), < emotus, pp. of emovere, move out,
ing cope whereof all things are emmantelled and covered). from the vicinity of Tombstone, Arizona. move away, remove, stirup, agitate see emove.] :
Holland, tr. of Pliny, i. 1. emmovet, r. t. See emove. If. Excited or unusual motion; disturbed move-
2. Toplaceround, by way of fortification; con- emodin (em'o-din), n. In chem., a glucoside (Cjs ment.
struct as a defense. H^qOs), crystallizing in orange-yellow prisms, I think nothing need to be said to encourage it [bath-
Besides the walls that he caused to be built and emman- found in the bark of buckthorn and in tlie root ing in cold water], provided this one caution be useil. that
telled alKiut otlier towns. Holland, tr. of Pliny, xxi.\. 1. of rhubarb. he never go into the water, "when exercise has at all warm'tl
Emmanuel (e-man'-ii-el), n. 1. Hee Immanucl. emollescence
(em-o-les'ens), n. L. e, out, him or left any emotion in his blood or pulse.
[< Locke, Education, §
— 2. An ointment much used in the latter part -h mollesccre, inceptive of mollire, soften: see
2. An agitated or aroused, and usually distinct-
8.
of the sixteenth century, composed of herbs emollient.] In a body beginning to melt, that
ly pleasurable or painful, state of mind directed
boiled in wine, and having pitch, suet, mastic, degree of softness which alters its shape the ;
toward some object; technically, a sensation
etc., afterward added. first or lowest degree of fusion.
excited by an idea and directed toward an ob-
emmarblet (e-mar'bl), v. t. [< em-^ marble.] + emoUiate (e-mol'iat), v. t. pret. and pp. emol-
;
ject, and accompanied by some bodily commo-
To impart to or invest with the qualities of liated, ppr. emolliating. [In-eg. < L. emollire (pp.
tion, such as blushing, trembling, weeping, or
marble ; harden or render cold like marble. emollitus), sott&a: see emollient.] To soften;
some slighter disturbance not manifest to a
Also enmarble. render effeminate. [Rare.]
second party. I'nder violent emotion all the muscles
Thou doest emmarble the proud hart of her Emolliated by four centuries of Roman domination, the of the body may be affected, but the most common effects
Whose love liefore their life they doe prefer. Belgic colonies had forgotten their pristine valour.
Pinkerton.
are in the expression of the face —
the mouth, eyes, and
Spenser, In Honour of Love, 1. 139. nose, named in the order of their expressiveness. The
emmeleia (em-e-le'ya), n. [< Gr. ijiiii'kem, har- emollient (e-mol'yent), a. and n. [= F. emollient voice is also generally affected.
mony, unison, < i/if^t'kr/r;, harmonious, in unison, Sp. emolicnte =
Pg. It. emolliente, < L. emolli- = I'he stirrings of pride, vanity, covetousness, jmpurity,
discontent, resentment, these succeed each otlier through
< ev, in, +
//('/w,, song, harmony.] In Gr. music : en{t-)s, ppr. of emollire, soften, < e, out, mol- + the day in momentary emotio}is, and are known to Him.
(a) Consonance; concord; harmony. (6) Afor- lire, Boiten, <. mollis, solt seemollient, mollify.] : J. H. Newman, Parochial Sermons, i. 45.
; + )
the disposition to substitute superficial emotion jje in or on, < h, in, + Traaaav, sprinkle.] 1.
for deeper feeling or right purpose. —
3. The j^ powder nsed to remove any disagreeable
expression of emotion. odor from the person. 2. A cataplasm. — i!y limperor [Afaturn herse).
emotionalist (e-mo'shon-al-ist), n. [< cmo- empassiont (em-pash'on), v. t. See impassion, , eggs ; b. larva, dorsal view
-— '-' -
pupa, lateral view d, male butter-
; c,.pupa, ;
. , . _
emotively (f-mo'tiv-li), adv. In an emotive emperere, < OF. empereor, F. empereur Pr. = France at large. Chief-consulship, Emperorship, victory
sicfnification), < Gr. cpiijaaiq, an appearing in, out- 4t. According to appearance according to im- ;
a figure consisting in a significant, pregnant, [NL., < Gr. h, in, on, -I- iff.vci^, an eruption, <
or suggestive mode of expression, implying (es- tfkvtiv, break out, boil over.] In med., a vesic-
pecially in connection with the context or the ular tumor or eruption.
circumstances under which an oration is de- emphotion (em-fo'ti-on), n. pi. emphotia (-a). ;
livered) more than would necessarily or ordi- [MGr. e/KpuTiov (also e/Kpureioc caOt/g), lit. a gar-
narily be meant by the words used. This figure is ment of light, < ev, in, + <j>ac (^ur-), light.]
of two kinds, according as it suggests either something strawberry False-worm {Emphytus tnaculatus).
In the Gr. Ch., the white robe put on immedi-
more than is said, or something purposely not mentioned ately I, a,pupa, ventral and lateral views {line shows natural size) 3,
after baptism the chrisom. ; fly, enlarged (wings on one side detached): 4. larva; 5, fly with
;
or professedly not intended. Poeta frequently employ it win^s closed ; 6, larva curled up 7, cocoon 8, antenna 9, egg. (4,
for the former purpose, especially in similes and epitliets. emphractic (em-frak'tik), a. and n. [< Gr. epi- ; : ;
(6) The mode of delivery appropriate to preg- (jipaKTiKog, likely to obstruct, < ifuppaaaeiv, ob-
nant or suggestive expression ; hence, rhetor- struct, block up, < iv, in, +
<ppdaaciv, fence in,
transverse head, prominent eyes, and a long
ical stress; in general, significant stress; spe- block, stop.] I. a. In med., having the prop- abdomen, cylindrical in the male, and broad
cial stress or force of voice given to the utter- erty of closing the pores of the skin. and carinate in the female. The larva; have 22 legs,
ance of a word, succession of words, or part II. n. A
substance which when applied to and are leaf-feeders. The male of E. vtaculatus is black,
of a word, in order to excite special attention. the skin has the property of closing the pores. the female honey-yellow; its larva feeds on the straw-
Emphasis on a syllable diifers from syllabic accent by emphrensyt (em-fren'zi), V. t. [< fm-l phren- + berry, ancl is known in the United States and Canada as
the .stravvlicrry false-worm.
being exceptional in use, and altering the ordinaiy pro- sy, obs. form of frenzy.] To make frenzied
nunciation of the word, either by increasing the stress
madden. Empidse (em'pi-de), n. pi. [NL., contr. of Em-
on the syllable regularly accented or by transferring the pididce, < Empis (Empid-), the typical genus:
accent to another syllable as, a sin may be a sin of o'mis- Is it a ravenous beast, a covetous oppressour? his tooth
:
sion or a sin of com'mission (instead of omis'sion, com- like a mad dog's envenomes and emphrensies.
see Empis.] A
family of tetrachsetous brachy-
mis'sionX £p. Hall, St. Paul's Combat. cerous flies, of the order Diptera, containing up-
The province of emphatis is so much more important ward of 1,000 species, mostly of small size, in-
than that of accent that the customary seat of the latter
emphymat (em-fi'ma), n. [NL., < Gr. cv, in, -I-
habiting temperate and cold countries. They are
is transferred in any case where the claims of emphasis re-
a tumor, a growth, <
(pijia, (j>vea6m, grow.] A characterized by a globose head with contiguous eyes, a
quire it. E. Porter, Rhetorical Delivery, iv.
tumor. simple third antenna-joint, and lengthened tarsal cells of
2. Special and significant vigor or force as,
(em'fi-sem), n. The English form emphysem tlie wings. They are very active and voracious, and in
of oiiphysrma. [Rare.]
:
general resemlile the Asilidce. Species of this family may
emphasis of gesticulation; in general, signifi- be seen dancing in swarms over running water in spring-
cance; distinctiveness. emphysema (em-fi-se'ma), n. [NL., < Gr. £/i- time. 1 lie slender larvaj live in garden-mold. AlsoA'm-
(piiarjfia, an inflation (of the stomach, peritoneum, pididee and Empides.
External objects stand before us ... in all the life and
emphasis of extension, figure and colour.
etc. ), < e/i<j>vaav, blow in, inflate, < ev, in, (jivaav, +
(em-pid'i-de), n. pi. [NL.] Same
Empididae
Sir W. Hamilton. blow.] In pathol., distention with air or other as Empidce.
=Syn. 1. Emphasis, Accent, Stress. Emp?iasis is gener- gases —
Imterstitial emphysema, tiic presence of air Empidonaz (em-pi-do'naks), ti.
or other gases in the interstices of the tissues.— Vesicu-
[NL. (Caba-
ally upon a word, but may be upon a combination of words nis, 1855), < Gr. ifnri^ {e/imd-), a mosquito, gnat
lar emphysema, the permanent dilatation of the alve-
or a single syllable. Accent is upon a syllable as, the place
of the accent in the word "demonstrate" is not fixed.
:
olar passages and infundibula of the lungs, the air-cells
(see Empis), ava^, king.] large genus of + A
Stress is a synonym for either emphasis or accent. Sec Itecoming obliterated. Also called alveolar ectasia. small Ameri-
injlection. emphysematous, emphysematose
(em-fi- can olivaceous
That voice all modes of passion can express sem'a-tus, -tos), a. [? emphysema{t-) + -ous, flycatchers, of
Which marlcs the proper word with proper stress ; -ose.] 1 Pertaining to, characterized by, or of
. the family Ty-
But none emphatic can that spealier call the nature of emphysema distended ; bloated. ; rannidw, inhab-
Who lays an equal emphasis on all. Lloyd.
— North,
2. In 6o<., bladdery; resembling a bladder. iting
By increasing, therefore, the degree of habitual accent
on a given syllable, we can render emphatic the word in emphyteusis (em-fl-tu'sis), n. [LL. (in Roman Central, and
which it occurs. Q. L. Raymond, Orator's Manual, § ii".
civil law), < Gr. c/KpvTevai^ (only in Roman use), South Ameri-
lit. an implanting, < t/iifivTeveiv, implant, ingraft, ca, having the
emphasize (em'fa-siz), v. t. ; pret. and pp. em-
< i/KfivToc, implanted, ingrafted, inborn, innate bill and feet
phasized, ppr. emphasizing. [< emphas(is) + (> ult. E. imp, q. v.), < e/jfveiv, implant, pass, moderate in
-ize.] 1. To utter or pronounce with emphasis
render emphatic ; lay stress upon : as, to em-
grow in, < h, in, -f- (piieiv, produce, pass, grow.] length among
In Bom. law, a contract by which houses or allied genera,
phasize a syllable, word, or declaration ; to em-
mean length
phasize a passage in reading. 2. To bring out — lands were given forever or for a long term on
condition of their being improved and a stipu-
of
among related
clearly or distinctly ; make more obvious or
lated annual rent paid to the grantor. It was flycatchers, the
more positive ; give a stronger perception of.
usually for a perpetual term, thus correspond- wings pointed,
In winter it [the sea] is warmer, in summer it is cooler,
than the ambient air, and the difference is emphasized the
ing to the feudal fee. Traill's Flycatcher i^Emfitdtmax zratitt). the tail emargi-
farther we get away from the shore. We are told that with the municipalities began the nate, and the
Pop. Sci. Mo., XXVI. 53.5. practice of letting out agri vectigales, that is, of" leasing plumage mostly dull-greenish. Four „,
species are .
land for a perpetuity to a free tenant, at a fixed rent, and very common woodland migratory insectivorous birds of
Unequal powers have made unequal opportunities first, the eastern United States: the Acadian flycatcher, E.
however much the unequal opportunities afterwards may under certain conditions. The plan was afterwards ex-
tensively imitated by individual proprietors, and the ten- acadicus ; Traill's, E. trailli ; the least, E. minimus ; and
react on and emphasise the situation. the yellow-bellied, E. JUlviventris.
ant, whose relation to the owner had originally been de-
Fortnightly N. XLII.
Jiev., S., 192.
termined by his contract, was subsequently recognised i>y empiercet (em-pers'), v. t. [< em-i + pierce.^
emphatic (em-fat'ik), a. [= F. emphaUque = the Praetor aa having himself a qualified proprietorship, See impierce.
Sp. enfdHco =
Pg. emphatico It. enfatico (cf. = which in time became known as Emphyteusis.
He stroke so hugely with his borrowd blade.
G. emphatisch =
Dan. Sw. emfatisk), i Gr. £//0a- Maine, Ancient Law, p. 299.
That it empierst the Pagans burganet.
TiK(5f (< l/Kjxiatc, stem *e/_i(t>aTi-), equiv. form of e/i-
,
emphyteuta (em-fl-tfl'ta), n. [LL., < Gr. efi- Spenser, F. Q., II. viii. 45.
(pavriK6(, expressive, vivid, forcible, < e/i<l>aiveiv (^vTcvrij^, a tenant by emphyteusis see cmphy- :
[<.em-^+ pight.] Fixed.
empightt (em-pit')> a.
(t/ii^D-), show, declare see emphasis.] 1. Ut-
:
teu.iis.] In Horn, law, a tenant by emphyteusis.
Three bodies in one wast empight.
tered, or to be uttered, with emphasis or stress emphyteutic (em-fi-tu'tik), a. [< LL. emphy- Spenser, F. Q., V. x. 8.
of voice as, the emphatic words in a sentence. teuticns, <emphyteuta, q. v.] Pertaining to em-
[< ME. empire, empyre, em-
:
=SyiL Expressive, earnest, energetic, striking. phytcuticaries (-riz). [< LL. eniphyteuticarius, < dominion; sovereignty.
:
Upon the heads of Romans, and their princes. One of an ancient sect of too hastily to first principles. E. A. Abbott, Bacon, p. 344.
Familiarly to empire. B. Jomon, Sejanus, Iv. 3. H. «. 1. [cap.'i
What is called empiricism is the application of super-
Westward the course of empire takes its way.
Greek physicians who maintained that practice ficial truths, recognized in a loose, unsystematic way, to
Bp. Berkeley, Arts and Learning in America. or experience, and not theory, is the foundation immediate and special needs.
of the science of medicine. i. P. Ward, Dynam. Sociol., II. 203.
If we do our duties as honestly and as much in the fear
of God as our forefathers did, we need not trouble our- Among the Greek physicians, those who founded their 2. In med., the practice of empirics; hence,
selves much about other titles to empire. practice on experience called themselves eyrtptricg; those quackery; the pretension of an ignorant per-
Lowell, Among my Books, 1st ser., p. 244. who relied on theory, methodists and those who held a ;
Intellect (the natural progress of all true learning), . . . transcends experience. New Princeton Jtev., II. 169.
empire instead of arguments.
hurries, on the contrary, into the midst of sense, where he
Jer. Taylor, Works (ed. 18S5), L 690.
wanders afrandom without any end, and is lost in a laby-
2. A medical empiric.
It is to the very end of our days a struggle between our rinth of infinite particulars. Harris, Hermes, iv. empirictict, empiricutict (em-pi-rik'tik, em-
reason and our temper, which shall have the empire over pir-i-ku'tik), a. [An unmeaning extension of
us. Steele, Tatlir, So. 172. Vague generaliaations may form the stock-in-trade of
is an empiric notwithstand-
the political empirie, but he empiric.'] Empirical.
Circle of the empire. See eireU.— Eastern Empire, or ing. Stvbbi, Medieval and Modern Hist., p. 91. The most sovereign prescription in Galen is but empiri-
Empire of the East, originally, that division of the Ko- = Syn. Mountebank, etc. See quack, n.
2. nttick. Shak., Cot., li. 1.
Duo empire which had it* seat in Constantinople. Its final
separation from the Western Empire dates from the death empirical (em-pir'i-kal), o. [< empiric -al.] + empirism (em'pi-rizm), n. [= F. empirisme =
of Tbeodoeius the Great (A. D. 395), wboae sons Arcadius
and Hooorliu receired respectively the eastern and west.
1. Pertaining to or derived from experience or Sp. Pg. It. empirismo =
D. Dan. empirisme =
experiments depending upon or derived from
;
Sw. empirism, < NL. "empirismus, < Gr. Ifiirei-
em divisions of the Boman dominion. After the fall of the observation of phenomena.
the Western Empire, the Empire ot the East is commonly po(, experienced: see empiric.'] Empiricism.
known as the Byzantine empire. It continued until the In philosophical language the term empirical means aim- [Rare.]
capture of ConsUntinople by the Turks in 1453.— Empire ply what belongs to or is the product of experience or ob-
It is to this sense [second muscular], mainly, that we
Olty, the city of New York so called as being the chief
; servation. Sir W. Hamilton.
owe the conception of force, the origin of which empirism
city of the Empire State, and the commercial metropolis Now here again we may observe the
error into which
of the United SUtes. —
Empire State, tlM SUte of New could never otherwise explain.
Locke waa led by confounding the cause of our ideas with G. S. Hall, German Culture, p. 219.
York so called from its superior population and wealth
:
their occasion. There can be no idea, he argues, prior to
as compared with the other States of the Union.— Holy experience; granted. Therefore he concludes the mind empiristic (em-pi-ris'tik), a. Of or pertaining
1t£mm-n Bmplre, the German-Roman empire in western
previous to it Is, as it were, a tabula rasa, owing every to empiricism or to the empiricists; empirical.
and central Europe (in later times commonly styled the notion which It gains primarily to an empirical source.
Oerman empire), which, after a lapse of more than three [Rare.]
J. D. Morell.
hnndred years, reunited a large portion of the territorie* The empiristic view which Helmholtz defends is that
formerly belonging to the Western Empire. The union of The empirical generalization that guides the farmer in
the space^letennlnatlona we perceive are in every case
the German royal and Koman imperial crowns began with his rotation of crops serves to bring his actions into con-
products of a process of unconscious inference.
Cbarlee the Great or Charleniagne, king of the Franks, who cord with certain of the actions going on in plants and XIL
W. James, Mind, 645.
was crowned emperor by tlie Pope at Rome A. D. 800 ; but solL H. Spencer, Prin. of Biol., 5 28.
the line of Oerman kings who were at the same time Holy Empis (em'pis), n. [NL. (Linneeus, 1767), <
2. Derived, as a general proposition, from a
Roman emperors begins woperly with Otbo the Great, Gr. f ^n-if (t/jTrid-), a mosquito, gnat, larva of the
crowned emperor in 902. The empire was regarded a* the narrow range of observation, without any war-
rant for its exactitude or for its wider validity. gadfly cf. Jpis^.] The typical genus of the
;
temporal form of a theoretically nnivenal dominion, wboee
•piri tnal head was the Pope, and the earlier emperors were
Family Empidce.
The empiriaU diagram only represents the relative num- pret. and pp. em-
ber and position of the parts. Just as a careful observation emplace
crowned at Rome by the splritiul mlers of Christendom. (em-plas'), t>. t. ;
The empire continued under monarchs of the Saxon, Fran- shows them In the fiower but if the diagram also indi-
; placed, ppr. emplacing. [< OF. emplader, place,
conian, and Hohenstaufendynaatiee, paaslngln 1273 to the
Aiutrian house of Hapsburg, the members of which line
cates the places where members are suppressed, ... I employ, < en- placer, place: see place.] To +
call it a theoretical diagram. place; locate. [Rare.]
remained in uninterrupted possession of the empire from Sachs, Botany (trans.), p. 525.
1438 until iU final extinction in 180& It had long pre- They (Iranic buildings] were emplaced on terraces fonn-
It is all impossible that Henry II. may have been
not at
Tioosly lost the greater part of the external territories
pupils of Vacarius certainly he was more of
ed of vast blocks of hewn stone, and were approached by
which had entitled It to be called Roman ; and its final among the :
—Weetem Empire, the distinctive designation of the The empirical treatment he submitted to hastened
. . .
But till recently it was impossible to give to Uz any
western portion of the Roman worid after lis division Into his en<L Goldsmith, Bolingbroke. more definite etnjHacem^nt.
two independent empires In A. D. 396. (.See Battem Jim- G. Rawlinson, Origin of Nations, it. 241.
upon experience. Also spelled empeirema. < OF. emphistrc, F. empldtre= Pr. emplastre
that it would approximate to the truth so far l>eyond the
=
empiresnlp (em'pir-ship), n. The power, sover- temperatures at which the experiments were made.
Sp. emplasto Pg. emplastro = It. empiastro, =
eiRuty, or dominion of an empire. empirically (em-pir'i-kal-i), adv. In an em- impiastro, < L. emplastrtim, a plaster, also, in
England has seized the empiretkip of India. pirical manner by experiment according to ;
horticulture, the band of bark which surrounds
;
Liljrary Matj., July, 1886. experience without science ; in the manner the eye in ingrafting, the scutcheon, < Gr. Ifi-
;
empiric fem-pir'ik), a. and n. [Formerly em- of quacks. K'/MCTpov (also lfiv?M(yTpo() and ijm'AaaTov, with
pirich; i OF. empiriaue, F. empirique = Sp. em- Every science begins by accumulating observations, and or without (iMpf/amv, a plaster or salve, neut.
pirico = Pg. It. emjHrico (cf D. G. empirisch = presently generalizes these empiricalt}/.
. of f//7r?.a(TT0f, daubed on or over, < iittrTManuv,
H. Spencer, DaU of Ethics, 9 22.
Dan. 8w. empirisk), < L. empiricui, < Gr. i/in-cipi- plaster up, stuff in, < iv, in, + Kl&oauv, form,
ii6r, experienced (oi 'EuznptKni, the Empirics empiricism (em-pir'i-sizm), n. [< empiric + mold. Abbr. plaster, q. v.] A plaster.
see II., 1), < in-npia, experience, mere experi- -ixm. ^e empiric.'] 1. The character of being The spirits are smiainly moved both from vapours and
ence or practice without knowledge, esp. in empirical; reliance on direct experience and passions, and the parts by bathes, unguents, or em- . . .
medicine, empiricism, < l/nreipoi:, experienced observation rather than on theory; empirical plaisters. Bacon, On Learning, iv. 2.
or practised in, < iv, in, + Tre'tpa, a trial, ex- method; especially, an undue reliance upon All emplasteri applied to the breasts ought to have a
Wiseman, Surgery.
periment, attempt ; akin to T^&poi, a way, < 'ircp. mere individual experience. hole for the nipples.
; ; !
The tree that shall emptmtred be therby, defense. Macaulay, Sir J. Mackintosh. [< eniA, im-, + plunge.^ To plunge immerse. ;
Take of the senime, and bark, and therto bynde
This gemme unhurt. — Syn. 2. Employ, Hire. Hire and employ^ are words of Malbecco, seeing iiow his losse did lye, . . .
Patiadiue, Husbondrie (E. E. T. S.), p. 161. different meaning. To hire is to engage in service for Into huge waves of griefe and gealosye
wages. Tlie word does not imply dignity ; it is not cus- Full deepe emptonged was, and drowned nye.
emplastic (em-plas'tik), a. and n. [< Gr. f^- tomary to speak of hiring a teacher or a pastor ; we hire Spenser, F. Q., III. x. 17.
jrXaoTiKOf, stopping the pores, clogging, < iii- a man for wages ; we employ him for wages or a salary. That hell
z'/Moaecv, plaster up, stop up, stuff in, etc. : see
To employ is thus a word of wider signification. A man Of Iiorrour, whereinto she was so suddenly emplung'd.
hired to labor is employed, but a man may l)e employed Daniel, Hymen's Triumph.
emplaster, h.] I. a. Viscous'; glutinous; adhe- in a work wlio is not hired ; yet the presumption is that
sive; fit to be applied as a plaster: as, emplas- the one employing pays. Employ expresses continuous empodium
" (cm-p6'di-um), ». pi. empodia (-a).
-
tic applications. occupation more often than Aire does. [JJ'L., <
.
Gr. », in,. .
+.
ttov^ (jrorf-)
,
E. foot. Cf.
.
=
H, H. A constipating medicine. employ (em-ploi'), «• [< F- emploi =
Sp. em- Gr. iinrddioq, at one's feet, in the way, similarly
emplastrationt, «. The act of budding or graft- pleo = Pg. emprego = It. impiego ; from the
formed.] In entom., a claw-like organ which in
ing. verb.] Occupation; employment. many genera of insects is seen between the
Solempnyte Iiath emplagtracton, As to tlie genius of tlie people, they are industrious, . . .
ungues or true claws, it agrees with the true claws
Wherof Ijeforne is taught the diligence. but luxurious and extravagant on the days when they in sti'uctnre, and by some authors is called spurious claw.
Palladius, Husbondrie (K K
T. S.), p. 165. have repose from their employs. It is prominent in lucanid beetles. The tenn was first
Pococke, Description of the East, II. ii. 10. used by Nitzch.
empleadt, »• * See implead.
[< Gr. eimleKToq,
With due respect and joy, empoison (em-poi'zn), V. t. [< ME. empoysonen,
emplectite (em-plek'tit), «. I trace the matron at her loved employ.
inwoven (see emplectum), + -ite^.] A sulpMd Crabbe, Works, I. 58.
enpoisonen, enpoysonen, < OP. empoisonner, en-
of bismuth and copper, occurring in prismatic It happens that your true dull minds are generally pre-
poisonner, F. empoisonner, < en- poisonner, +
crystals of a grayish or tin-white color and ferred for public employ, and especially promoted to city poison: see ^wison.l To poison; affect with
bright metallic luster. honors your keen intellects, like razors, being considered
;
or as if with poison act noxiously upon em-
; ;
too sharp for common service. bitter. [Obsolete or archaic in all uses.]
emplecttiiii, emplecton (em-plek'tum, -ton), IrmTig, Knickerbocker, p. 161.
n. [L., < Gr. iinrMKTov, rubble-work, neut. of And aftre was this Soudan enpoysound at Damasce and ;
employable (em-ploi'a-bl), a. [< employ + his Sone thoglite to regne aftre him be Heritage.
euTTMh-roi, inwoven, < k/zir^KEiv, inweave, en- MdndevUle, Travels,
twine, entangle, < h, in, v'Mkuv, weave.] + -able.] That may be employed; capable of p. 37.
being used ; fit or proper for use. A man by his own alms empoison'd.
In arch., either of two kinds of masonry in use And with his charity slain. Shak., Cor., v. 5.
(oh-plwo-ya'), ?i. The French form of
among the Greeks and Romans, and other peo- employ^ The whole earth appears unto him blasted with a curse,
emploiiee.
ples. (a) That kind of solid masonry in regular courses -, - /.j n , , • and empoisoned with the venom of the serpent.
tu whicli the courses are formed alternately entirely of employedneSS (em-ploi ed-nes), n The state Situation of Paradise (1683), p. 62.
blocks presenting one of their sides to the exterior and of being employed Yet Envy, spite of lier empoisoned breast.
entirely of blocks presenting their ends to the exterior. Things yet less consistent with chemistry and employed- Shall say, I lived in grace here with the best.
Sometimes the [Etruscan] wall is built in alternate 1USS than with freedom, or with truth. B. Jonson, Poetaster, v. 1.
courses, in the style which has been called emplecton, the Boyle, Works, VI. 38. That these disdaineons females and this ferocious old
ends of the stones being exposed in one course, and the -eel, after + woman are placed here by the administration, not only to
employee (em-ploi-e'), n. [< employ
gides in the other. G. RawUnson, Orig. of Nations, i. 114. empoison the voyagers, but to affront them
F. employe, fern, employee, one employed, pp. of Dickens, Mugby Junction, iiL
That kind of masonry, much used in ancient forti-
(6)
on both employer, employ.] One who works for an em-
flcation-walls, etc., in which the outside surfaces (em-poi'zn-er), n. [< ME. empoy-
sides are fonned of ployer; a person working for salary or wages: empoisonert One who poi-
soner, < empoysonen, empoison.]
ashler laid in regular applied to any one so working, but usually
courses, and the in- sons.
only to clerks, workmen, laborers, etc., and Thus ended ben thise honiicydes two,
closed space between
thera is filled in with but rarely to the higher officers of a corporation And eek the false empoysoner also.
rul>ble-work, cross- or government, or to domestic ser\'ants: as, Chamer, Pardoner's Tale (ed. Skeat), C. 1. 894.
stones being usually the employees of a railroad company. [Often empoisonment (em-poi'zn-ment), n. [< F. em-
placed intervals, English
at
written employe or employe even as an poisonnement, < empoisonner, empoison: see em-
either in courses or as Emplectum {b).
ties extending from face word.] poison and -ment.'] The act of administering
to face of the wall, and binding the whole together. The To keep the capital thus invested [in materials for rail-
poison ; the state of being poisoned a poison- ;
term is, however, a loose one, and can he applied to any way construction], and also a large staff of employes, ing. [Rare.]
sort of masonry of greater thickness than tlie width of a standing idle entails loss, partly negative, partly positive.
//. Spencer, Railway Jlorals. It were dangerous for secret empoisonments. Bacon,
single block, and so laid that the wall is bound together
by some regular alternation of blocks placed lengthwise [= F. employeur.1 The graver blood empoisonments of yellow and other
anil endwise. Sometimes erroneously written ernjjfecd'on. employer (era-ploi'6r), n.
fevers. Alien, and Neurol., V'l. 45.
See implead. One who employs ; a user ; a person engaging
emplete, v. t.
empoldered (em-p61'd6rd), a. [< era-1 -f- pol-
A Middle English variant of im- or keeping others in service.
empliet, v. t.
By a short contract you are sure of making it the inter-
der + -ed2.] Reclaimed and brought into the
ply.
est of the contractor to exert that skill for the satisfac-
condition of a polder ; brought under cultiva-
emploret (em-pl6r'), v. t. An obsolete form of Burke, Economical Reform See ^polder.
implore.
tion of his employers. tion. - - ....
....
Employers and Workmen Act, an English statute of emporetict, Omporeticalt (em-po-ret'ik, - i.jjjji.,^
employ (em-ploi'), V. t. [Formerly also imploy; 1875 (38 and 39 Vict., c. 90), which enlarges the powers of ^_ r^ Jj. emporeticus for *emporeuticus, < Gr.
< OF. employer, emploier (early *emplier : see county courts in disputes between inasters and employees,
^^op^^^^iif, mercantile, commercial, < k/i77opev-
emplie, imply), F. employer Pr. emj)leiar Sp. = = and gives other courts certam civil jurisdiction such m 'f' '^4._„ j „+,„<«„ .
emponum.]1 Of
cases -Employers' Llahility Act, an English statute caOat, trade, traffic : „oa
see /.«,««v,-«™ Ot nr
or Tinr-
per-
emplear =
Pg. empregar It. impiegare, < L. = of 1880, securing to employees a right to damages for in. taining to an emporium; relatmg to mercuan-
implicare, infold, involve, engage, < in, in, -I- juries resulting from negligence on the part of the em- djge.
njjcare, fold: see pJtcate, and cf. Jmphcate and pioyer.
Ployf- - ATnnnris'h+ ».
» «. PulE. enporyshen, < OF. empo-
emporisht,
.-„ n t
imply.^ It. To inclose; infold.— 2. To give employment (em-ploi'ment),M. [Formerly also ^J^*;r"nntr>,ctP
riss-, contracted stem of certain parts of empo-
occupation to; make use of the time, attention imployment ; < employ -ment.'] 1. The act
vrir, cmpoverer, make poor: see empover, and
or labor of ; keep busy or at work ; use as an of of being
employing or using, or the state impoverish, of which emporish is ult. a con-
agent. employed. tracted form.] To impoverish
Nothing advances a business more than when he that The hand of little employment hath the daintier sense. And where as the coloryng of foreyns byeng and sell-
emplm/ed is believed to know the mind, and to liave the Shak., Hamlet, v. 1.
is yng and pryuee markettes be mayntaned by suffrans of
heart, of him that sends him. Donne, Sermons, v. Tlie increasing use of the pointed arch is to be clearly vntrewe fremen such as kepe innes, logynges and lierlio-
Tell him I have some business to employ him. traced, from its first timid employment in construction, rowyng of foreyns and straungers to the hurt aud enpo-
till it appears where no constructive advantage is gained rysshyng of fremen.
B. Jonson, Every Man in liis Humour, L 1.
by it. C. E. Norton, Church-building in Middle Ages, p. 27. Arnold's Chronicle, 1502 (ed. 1811, p. 83).
The mellow harp did not their ears employ.
And mute was all the warlike symphony. 2. Work or business of any kind, physical or emporium (em-p6'ri-um). Sp. Pg. It. [=
Dryden, tr.Metamorph., xii. 218.
of Ovid's mental that which engages the head or hands
; cmporio, < Ij. emporium, < Gr. e/ijrdptov, a trad-
This is a day in which the thoughts of our countrymen anything that occupies time or attention ; office ing-place, mart, exchange, < ifiiropia, trade,
ought to t>e employed on serious subjects. or position involving business: as, agricultural commerce, < c/i7Topoc, a passenger, traveler,
Addison, Freeholder.
employments ; mechanical employments ; public merchant, < ev, in, -t- ffdpof, a way (cf. eu~opev-
3. To make use of as an instrument or means employment. cuBai, travel, trade, TTopevcaOai, travel, fare), <
apply to any purpose : as, to employ medicines I left the Imployment [logwood trade], yet with a de- / *TTep, nap = E. /are.] 1 place of trade a . A ;
in curing diseases. sign to return hither after I had been in England. mart a town or city of important commerce,
;
Dampier, Voyages, II. ii. 131.
Xii d, halfe to be employed to the vse of the said Cite, especially one in which the commerce of an
The dayly employment of these Recluses is to trim the
and the Oder halfe to the sustentacion of the said flrater-
Lamps, and to make devotional visits and processions to
extensive country centers, or to which sellers
English Gilds (E. E. T. 8.), p. 336.
nltc.
the several Sanctuaries in the Church. and buyers resort from other cities or coun-
Poesie ought not to be abased and imployed vpon any Maundrell, Aleppo to Jerusalem, p. 71. tries a commercial center.
vnworthy matter & subject.
;
Puttenham, Arte of Eng. Poesie, p. 18. M. Dumont might easily have found employments more [Lyons! is esteemed the principall emporium or mart
gratifying to personal vanity than that of arranging works towne ot all France next to Paris. Coi-yat, Crudities, I. 59.
Thou Shalt not destroy the trees, . . . and thou shalt not his own. Macaulay, Mirabeau.
That wonderful emporium [Manchester], which in popu-
not cut them down ... to employ them in the siege.
An implement. Nares, [Rare.] lation and wealth tar surpasses capitals so much renowned
iieut. XX. 19. 3t.
! : . ::;
Ro'j and Barlow, Rede Me and Be nott Wrothe, p. 100. SackvUle, Duke of Buckingham, st. 58. as, empty words empty compliments. ;
empoverisht (em-pov'6r-ish), t). t. See impov- emprisont (em-priz'n), v. t. An obsolete form A word may be of great credit with several authors,
. . .
erish. of impri.-:on. and be by them made use of as if it stood for some real
being but yethe that reads caimot frame any distinct
if
empower (em-pou'6r), V. t. [Formerly also im- emprosthO'tonOS (em-pros-thot'o-nos), n. [< ;
stretching.] In pathol., tonic muscular spasm, In nice balance, truth with gold she weighs,
Him he trusts with every key And solid pudding against empty praise.
Of highest charge, impow'ring him to Frame, bending the body forward, or in the opposite di- Pope, Dunciad, i. 54.
As he thought best, his whole (Economy. rection from opisthotonos. Also called epistho-
J. Beaumont, Psyche, i. 143. A concept to be considered as empty and as referring
is
tonos. to no object, if the synthesis which it contains does not
The Regulating Act emvotcered the Crown to re-
. . .
emptet, v. An obsolete form of empty. belong to experience.
move him [Hastings] on an address from the Company. Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, tr. by Max Midler.
Macaulay, Warren Hastings. emptier (emp'ti-*r), ». One who or that which
empties or exhausts. Death and misery
2. To impart power or force to ; give eflScacy But empty names were grown to be.
For the Lord bathe turned away the glory of Jaak6b, William Morris, Earthly Paradise,
to ; enable. as the glorie of Israel : for the emptiers haue emptied
I. 366.
Does not the same force that enables them to heal em- them out and marred their vine branches. 4. Destitute of knowledge or sense ignorant: ;
potver them to destroy ? Baker, Red. on Learning. GeTieva Bible, Nahum iL 2. as, an empty coxcomb.
= Syn. To commission, licenae, warrant, qualify.
1. emptiness (emp'ti-nes), ». [< empty + -ness.'] Qaping wonder of the empty crowd.
empresario (em-pre-e&'ri-o), n. fop. empresa- 1 The state of being empty the state of con-
. ; William Morris, Earthly Paradise, III. 160.
rio =
Pg. emjyrezario =
It. impresario, an un- taining nothing, or nothing but air: as, the 6. Forlorn from destitution or deprivation
dertaker, manager, theatrical manager: see im- emptiness of a vessel. desolate; deserted.
premrio.} 1. In parts of the United States The moderation of slepe must be measured by helthe She INineveh] is empty, and void, and waste.
acquired from Mexico, one who projects and and ayckenes, by age, by time, by emplyness or fulnesse Nahum ii. 10.
manages a mercantile or similar enterprise, or of the body, &
by uaturall coniulextons.
Sir T. Eiyut, Castle o( Health, ii. Rose up against him a great fiery wall.
takes a leading part in it, for his own profit and Built of vain longing and regret and fear.
at his own risk, u.sually implying the possession His coffers sound Dull empty loneliness, and blank despair.
With hollow poverty and emptintss. William Morris, Earthly Paradise, III.
and control of a concession or p^int from gov- Shak., 2 Hen. IV., i. 3.
359,
ernment in the nature of a privilege or monop- 8. Wanting substance or solidity ; lacking re-
2. Lack of food ia the
oly. —
2. More specifically, a contractor who en-
fasting.
stomach; a state of
ality; unsubstantial; unsatisfactory: as, empty
gages with the Mexican government to intro- air; em^ty dreams; cmp% pleasures.
duce a body of foreign settlers. Also called Monks, anchorites, and the like, after much emptiness,
become melancholy. Burton, Anat. of MeL, p. 611. Frivolities which seemed empty as bubbles.
htibladore. Charlotte Bronte, Shirley, I.
Mark xii. 3.
trii, inperatrix, aco. -tricem, fern, of imperator, subsist in the emptitiess of light and shadow.
Dryden, of Uufresnoy's Art of Painting, Pref. They all knowing Smith would not retume emptie. If It
inperator, emperor : see emperor.'] 1. woman A tr.
were to be had.
who rules over an empire ; a woman invested 5. Unsatisf actorincMS ; insufilciency to satisfy Quoted in Capt. John Smith's True Travels, I. 205.
with imperial power or sovereignty. the mind or heart worthlessness.
;
9. Wanting food ; fasting ; hungry.
Mary, moder, bleaayd mayde, O frail estate of human things. My falcon now is sharp, and passing empty.
Queue of hevyn, Imperet of belle, Now to our coat your emptiness we know. Ihyden.
Shak., T. of the S., iv. 1.
Sende me grace both nnt and daye Form the Judgment atwut the worth or emptiuens of
Babeee Book (E. E. T. 8.), p. 368. things here, according as they are or are not of use in 10. Bearing no fruit; without useful product.
And torerelgn Uw, that atate'i collected will. relation to what ia to come after. Bp, Atterbury, Seven empty ears blasted with the east wind.
O'er throne* and globes, elate, Gen. xli. 27.
Bits emprest, crowning good, repressing 111. 6. Want of understanding or knowledge; vacu-
ity of mind ; inanity. Israel is an empty vine. Hos. x. 1.
Sir W. Jonet, Ode in Imitation of Alcaos.
Eternal smiles his emptiness betray. 11. Producing no effect or result; ineffectual.
2. The wife or the widow of an emperor: in the
Pope, Prol. to Satires, 1. 315. sword of Saul returned not empty.
T3ie 2 Sam. i. 22.
latter case called specifically empress dowager.
Knowledge is now no more a fountain seal'd Only the case.
She sweeps It through the court with troops of ladies, Drink deep, until the habits of the slave,
More like an emprem than duke Humphrey's wife. Her own poor work, her empty labour, left.
The sins of emptiness, gossip and spite "Tennyson, Lancelot and Elaine.
Shak., 2 Hen. VI., i. 3. And slander, die. Tetmyson, Princess, il.
fine trajupareut stuff, made of silk, or silk and Imen. and see adempt, exempt, redeem, redemption, etc.] 1 II. n. pi. empties (-tiz).
;
An empty vessel
having a design, osually of a flower-pattern, woven in in Buying; purchase. [Rare.] 2t. That which — or other receptacle, as a box or sack, packing-
case, etc.; an empty vehicle, as a cab, freight-
silk.
is bought provision supply.
;
;
empressement (on-pres'mon), n. fF., < em- houU Yeir, if he maye possible, shall he at all Faires, "Well," says Leigh Hunt, "I found him [a cabman]
jinxsrr, rctl., be eager, bustling, ardent, for- where the grolce Emotions shall be Ix)ughte for the returning from Hammersmith, and he said as an empty
ward: gee impress^!} Eagerness; cordiality; House for the houll Veir, as Wine, Wax, Beiffes, Multons, he would take me for half fare." .
demonstrative demeanor, Wheite and .Malt. (l.',12.) Frances Grundy, in Personal Traits of British Authors,
Quoted In Bourne's Pop. Antiq. (1777), p. 360. [p. 241.
empridet (em-prid' ), «. t. [ME. empriden; < em-i
+ pridt
.] To excite pride in; make proud. emptionalt (emj)'shon-al), o. [< emption + -a/.] empty (emp'ti), V. pret. and pp. emptied, ppr. ;
That may be purchased. emptying. [Also E. dial, empt ; < ME. empten,
And whenne thisJoumee was done. Fausamy was gret-
ly empriilede therofr, and went into the kynift'S palace for empty (emp'ti), a. and n. [< ME. empty, emty, tr. make empty, intr. be or become vacant, <
to take the qwene Ulyuipias ont4> of it, and haft> hir with cmti, amti, < AS. wmtig, emtig, eemetig, emetig, AS. (Emtian, intr., be vacant, be at leisure, <
hym. MS. Uncoln, A. L 17, fol. 8. vacant, empty, free, idle, < 'anneta, wmetla, tem- "cemeta, cemetta, leisure sete empty, a., on which :
emprintt (em -print'), n. and r. An obsolete ta, leisure (cf. the verb cemtian, be at leisure).] the verb in mod. use directly depends.] I.
form of imprint. I, a. 1. C'ontainingnothing, or nothing but air; trans. 1 To deprive of contents remove, pour,
. ;
emprise fem-priz'), n. [< ME. emprise, enprise, void of its usual or of appropriate contents; or draw out the contents from make vacant ;
< OF. emprise (= Pr. empreza, empreiza = Sp. vacant unoccupied saicf of any inclosure or
; : with o/ before the thing removed: as, to empty
emprrsu = Pg. empreza, empresa = It. impresa ; allotted space as, an cm/>^.i/ house or room an
: ; a well or a cistern; to empty a pitcher or a
ML, imnrisa, imprista, impresia), undertaking, empty chest or purse ; an empty chair or saddle. purse to empty a house of its occupants.
;
— ; :
Chaucer^ Prol. to Canon's Yeoman's Tale, I. 188. of Mucor; or, instead of conidia, thick, walled and spherical
resting spores may be formed, either asexually or by con- to combustion or combustibility. [Bare.]
The Plague hath emptitd its houses, and the fire con- Twenty-six species are now known in the United
StiUingfteet, Sermons, I. vi.
jugation. Of these and some other empyHcal marks I shall say no
muned them.
States, growing upon insects of all the hexapod orders. more, as they do not tell us the defects of the soils.
He, on whom from both her open hands
Larish Honour shower d all her stars.
empuset (em-pus'); «• ["^ ML. empnsa, < Gr. Kirwan, Manures, p. 81.
i/inovca, a hobgoblin assuming various shapes empytosist (em-pi-ro'sis), ». [NL., < Gr. f//-
And affluent Fortune fmptied all her horn.
Tfnnynon, Death of Wellington. sometimes identified with Hecate.'\ goblin A TTvpuai^, a kindling, heating, < i/nrvp6eiv, equiv.
2. To draw out, pour out, or otherwise remove or specter. Jer. Taylor. tocfiTTvpcvctv, kindle: see empyreuma.'\ gen- A
or discharge, as the contents of a vessel com- EmpU8ld8e(em-pu'8i-de),M.pZ. [NL.,<EmpMsa,
:
eral fire ; a conflagration.
monly with out: as, to empty out the water from 1, +
-idce.'\ Afamilyof OrWioptero, taking name The former opinion, that held these cataclisms and evi-
a pitcher. from the genus Empusa. Burmcistcr, 1838. 2)i/rof<es universal, was such as held that it put a total Con-
What l>e these two olive branches which through the empuzzlet (em-puz'l), v. t. [< em-^
puzsle.1
that of conflagration.
+
summation unto things in this lower world, especially
Sir M. Hale, Orig. of Mankind.
two golden pipes empty the golden oil out of themselves? To puzzle.
Zech. iv. 12. It hath emmualed the enquiries of others ... to make empyryt, «. [ME. empiry, < OF. empyree, F. em-
3. To discharge; pour out continuously or in a out how without fear or doubt he could discourse with pyree : see empyrean.] The empyrean.
such a creature. Sir T. Broume, Vulg. Err., i. 1,
steady course as, a river empties itself or its
: This heven is cald empiry that is at say, heven that is :
waters into the ocean. [A strained use, which empyema (em-pi-e'ma), n. [= p. empyeme fyry. =
liampole, Prick of Conscience, 1. 7761.
her, and shall empty her land. Jer. 11. 2. empyemic (em-pi-em'ik), a. [< emjyyema -ic] +
species, as D. novce-hollandiw, D. ater, and D. ir-
1. Pertaining to or of the nature of empyema. roratus. These birds resemble cassowaries, but belong to
H. intrans. 1. To become empty. —
2. Affected with empyema: as, an empyemic a different genus and subfamily, and are easily distinguish-
The chapel emptier; and thou may'st be gone patient.
Now, sun. B. Jonson, Underwoods.
empyesis (em-pi-e'sis), n. [NL., < Gr. hfnrinjai^,
2. To pour out or discharge its contents, as a suppuration, < kjinvelv, suppurate: see empye-
river into the ocean. [See note under I., 3.] pathol., pustulous eruption
ma.] In term : a
empty-Iianded (emp'ti-han'ded), a. Having used by Hippocrates, and in Good's system in-
nothing in the hands specifically, carrying
;
eluding variola or smallpox.
or bringing nothing of value, as money or a
empyocele (em'pi-o-sel), n. [= P. empyocile,
present. < Gr. e/xTTvog, suppurating (see empyema), +
Kijkr),
She brought nothing here, but she has been a good girl, tumor.] In pathol., a collection of pus within
a very good girl, and she shall not leave the house empty-
handed. Trollope. the scrotum.
empyreal (em-pi-re'al or em-pir'e-al), a. and «.
emptying (emp'ti-ing), ». [Verbal n. of empty,
[Ixirmerly also empehall (simulating imperial)
f.J 1. The act of making empty.
;
Boundless intemperance
= P. empyrial, < ML. *empyr(eus (as if < Gr.
"tinrvpaloi, a false form), LL. empyrlus or empy-
In nature is a tyranny it hath been
;
The untimely emptying of the happy throne. reus, fiery, < LGr. i/mvpioc, for Gr. e/iirvpog,^ in,
And fall of many kings. Shak., Macbeth, ir. 3. on, or by the fire, fiery, torrid, < iv, in, nvp + = Etnu {Dromatis nna-hoUandia).
2. That which is emptied out; specifically [p!.], E. fire : see pyre, fire.] I. a. Formed of pure
in the United States, a preparation of yeast fire or light ; pertaining to the highest and pur- ed byhavingno casque or helmet on the head, which, with
est region of heaven ; pure. the neck, is more completely feathered. The plumage is
from the lees of beer, cider, etc., for leavening. sooty-brown or blackish, and very copious, like long curly
[CoUoq., and commonly pronounced emptins.'] Go, soar with Plato to th' emp^jreal sphere. hair, there being two plumes to the quills, so that each
Pope, Essay on Man, ii. 23. feather seems double. The wings are rudimentary, useless
A betch o' bread thet hain't riz once ain't goin' to rise agin,
An" it's jest money throwed away to put the evnptins in. II. n. The empyrean; the region of celestial for flight, and concealed in the plumage. The emus are
Lowell, Biglow Papers, 2d ser., p. 11. intermediate in size between the cassowaries and the os-
purity. [Rare.]
triches. The species first named above is the one most
empty-panneledt (emp'ti-pan''eld), a. Haying The lord-lieutenant looking down sometimes
commonly seen in confinement.
nothing in the stomach without food said of ; From the empyreal, to assure their souls
:
2. (a) \mp.] [NL., orig. in the form £»iet(.] A
Against chance-vulgarisms. Mrs. Brouming.
a hawk. genus of cassowaries. Barrh-e, 1745. (6) The
My hawk has been empty-pannelVd these three houres. empyrean (em-pi-re'an or em-pir'e-an), a. and specific name of the galeated cassowary of
Qnarlet, The Virgin Widow (1650), I. 67. n. [= P. empyree = l?r. empirey, n., = Sp. em- Ceram, in the form emeu. Latham, 1790. (c) The
emptysis (emp'ti-sis), n. [NL., < Gr. ifi-nruai^, pireo = Pg. empyreo = It. empireo, adj., < ML. specific name of the east Australian Dromwua
a spitting, < e/iTrrvetv, spit tlpon, < ev, in, + nrv- empyrcBus, neut._as a noun, *empyrwum : see novce-hollandim, in the form emu. Stephens.
'
€cv, spit, for *aTrvetv = E. spew, q. v.] In pathol., empyreal.] I. a. Empyreal celestially refined, g^^g (e'mu), n. An Australian wood used for
;
hemorrhage from the lungs; spitting of blood; In th' empyrean heaven, the bless'd abode. tvtmers' work. Laslett.
The Thrones and the Dominions prostrate lie.
hemoptysis.
Not daring to behold their angry God.
emulable (em'u-la-bl), a. [< emul(ate) + -able.]
empngnt, v. t. See impugn. Dryden, Annus Mirabilis, 1. 1114. That may be emulated capable of attainment ;
empurple, impurple(em-,im-p6r'pl),».t.;pret. Yet upward she [the goddess] incessant files by emulous effort; worthy of emulation.
and pp. empurpled, impurpled, ppr. empurpling, Resolv'd to reach the high empyrean Sphere. [Rare.]
impurpling. [< em-1, im-, + purple.'] To tinge Prior, Carmen Seculare (1700), st. 23. This I say to all, for none are so complete but they may
or color with purple. Lispings empyrean will I sometimes teach espy some imitable and emulable good, even in meaner
And over it his huge great nose did grow. Thine honeyed tongue. Keata, Endymion, ii. Christians. Abp. Leighton, On 1 Pet. iii. 13.
Full dreadfully empurpled all with bloud. n. The region of pure light and fire; the emulate (em'u-lat), v. t; pret. and pp. emulat-
Speiiser, F. Q., IV. vii. 6.
highest heaven, where the pure element of fire ed, ppr. emulating. [< L. wniulatus, pp. of oemu-
The bright was supposed by the ancients to exist: the lari (> E. emule, v.), try to equal or excel, be emu-
Pavement, that like a sea of jasper shone,
Impurpled with celestial rosea, smiled. same as the ether, the ninth heaven according lous, < a;nmlus (> P. emule, n.), trying to equal
Milton, P. L, iii. 364. to ancient astronomy. or excel: see emulous.] 1. To strive to equal
Tho' roseate mom The deep-domed empyrean or excel in qualities or actions ; vie or compete
Pour all her splendours on th' empurpled scene. Rings to the roar of an angel onset. with the character, condition, or performance
T. Warton, Pleasures of Melancholy. Tennyson, Experiments in Quantity. of; rival imitatively or competitively: as, to
We saw the grass, green from November till April, empyreumt (em-pi-re'um), n. [ML. *empyrceum : emulate good or bad examples ; to emulate one's
mowed with daisies, and the floors of the dusky Httle din- see empyreal.] Same as empyrean. friend or an ancient author.
gles empurpled with violet*. The Century, XXX. 219.
Passed through all I would have
Empnsa (em-pfi'sa), n. [NL. (Illiger, 1798), < The winding orbs like an Intelligence, Him emulate you 'tis no shame to follow
:
Qt. &ho\>goh\in.']
IfiTTOvaa, 1. genus of gres- A Up to the empyreum. B. Jonson, Fortunate Isles. The better precedent B. Jonson, Catiline.
sorial orthopterous insects, of the family Man- empyreuma (em-pi-ro'ma), n. [NL., < Gr. i/i- The birds sing louder, sweeter.
having foliaceous appendages on the head And every note they emulate one another.
tidce, irvpcvfia, a live coal covered with ashes to pre- Fletcher, Pilgrim, v. 4.
and and a very slim thorax.
legs, short antennsB, serve the fire, < i^wpevtiv, set on fire, kindle,
E. pauperatais a prettily colored European spe- He [Dryden] is always imitating —
no, that is not the
< £/(7rt)pof on fire SB& empyreal.] In cftem., the — somebody in his more strictly
cies of rear-horse or praying-mantis. 2. ge- — A
, :
forming a white halo of apores around dead flies adhering Pertaining to or having tho taste or smell of
It is likewiseattended with a delirium, fury, and an in-
to window-panes in autumn. Spores of an Emjmsa, coming slightly burned animal or vegetable substances.
— Empyreumatic oil, an oil obtained from organic sub- voluntary laughter, the convulsione??iwia(i»i^ this motion.
in contact with a 8uital>le insect, enter it by means of hy- Arbuthnot.
phal germination and grow rapidly till the insect is killed, stanceswhen decomposed by a strong heat. The blossom opening to the day.
forming sometimes mycelium, but commonly, by budding, empyreumatize (em-pi-ro'ma-tiz), v. t. pret. ; The dews of heav'n reftn'd,
detached hyphal Iwdies of spherical or oval forni. When and pp. cmpyreumatized, ppr. cmpyreumatizing. Could naught of purity display.
the conditions are unfavorable to further growth the hyphal
bodies may be transformed into chlamydospores, l»ut un- [< empyreuniai t-) -ize.] +
To render empyreu- To emulate his mind. Goldsmith, Vicar. tIU.
der tarorable conditions of moisture the hyphal bodies matic decompose by heat. [Rare.]
; 3t. To envy.
;:
7»u^lf^re\ milkrr!i\vJ,t
out, dram < e, out, + miti-
^'»micre), Ar^iJ-).,
out,
Beattie, Moral Science, I. ii. i 5.
vt, t ^ v.- • S*'"*'
2. Effort to equa or excel in oualities or ac- emulgence (e-mul'jens), ».
1 1
^- ""'*•] To drain out. =
Bailey. emulsive acids. - Emulsive oU, rancid oiiveoil in this
state adapted for producing an emulsion, and used in dye-
:
[< emulgent: see ing as a fixing agent for aluminium or iron mordants.
tions; imitative rivalry as of ttat Which one ^„^] The
act of draining out. [Rare.]
adimres in another or others: as, the emM/a<io» w..i;™«„.., uk'^ renderedj nervous .^.. emunctory (e-mungk'to-ri), a. and «. [= F.
of great uption* or nr or thw ncU
nt tne rir-li hv the r^n,- **'' ?*" *""''' by the flattery of emonctoire =" Sp. Pg. emunctorio
i
=
01 irreat actions, Dy tne poor. a woman's worship or they would he for returning it, at ;
It. emuTi-
torio, < L. 'emunctorius, adj., found only as a
Then younger brothers may eate gnuse, yf they cannot '*'**' partially, as though it could be bandied to and fro
achieue to excell which will bring a blessed emulacion to
;
without emulgetice of the poetry. noun, neut., < LL. emunctorium, a pair of snuff-
England. BiMike oj frectdence (E. E. T. 8., extra ser.), i. 11. O. Meredith, The Egoist, xlv. ers, < L. emunctus, pp. of emungere, wipe or
The apoatle exhorts the Corinthians to an holy and gen- emulgent (e-mul'jent), o. and n. [= F ^ttl- blow the nose, < e, out, -I- mungere (scarcely-
?^.1?:^*""i°! '?,' '-'»»?'/ °' .'.'"= Macedonians, in con-
trlbuting freely tu the relief of the poor sainU at Jenisa-
gent =
Sp. 'Pg. It.'emulgente, < L. emulgen(t-)s, used), blow the nose, Gr. aKo-juvaaem, mid. =
•«"»- So«<A, Sermons.
ppr. of em uTgere, milk out, drain out: see ano-fivaaeaeai, blow the nose; akin to mucus,
emulge.] I, a. In ana<., draining out: applied q. v.] I. a. E.xcretory; depuratory; serving
But now, since the rewards of honour are taken away,
that virtuous emuUUitm is turned into direct malice. to the renal arteries and veins, as draining the to excrete, carry off, and discharge from the
Dryden, Essay on Dram. Poesy. urine from the blood. body waste products or effete matters.
St. Antagonistic rivalry ; malicious or injurious n. n. 1. In a«a<., an emulgent vessel. 2. n. n. pi. emuHctories (-riz).
organ of the body which has an excretory or
part or an — ; A
contention strife for superiority. [Unusual.] In phartitatMlogy, a remedy which excites the
;
two KUUa or cities ; In aucb caaes it may be friendly and He is not emulout, as Achilles is. Shak., T. and C, ii. 3.
honorslde. tortoises, of the family Trionychida;, having the
What the Oaul or Moor could not effect. shell very flat and subcircular in outline, and
A noble emulation beat* your breast. Dryden. Nor emulout Carthage, with her length of spite.
Envy, to which th' ignoble mind'a a lUre, Shall be the work of one. B. Jonton, Catiline.
the toes webbed and with only three claws.
Is emulation in the learn 'd or brave.
They are aquatic, and are often found buried in the mud.
Pope, Eaasy on Man, U. im.
emnlously (em'u-lus-li), adv. With emtilation, A. mutica,ut North America, is a comparatively small spe-
or desire of equaling or excelling. cies, with a smootli shell. The genus is closely related to
OtmfMHon tor tbe crown, there Is none nor can be. Anpidonectes (or Trionyx).
So tempt they him, and emuloutly vie
Bacon.
To bribe a voice that empires would not buy, Emydae (em'i-de), w. pi. Same as Emydidte.
Whenthe worship of rank and the worship of wealth Lantdotme, To the Earl of Peterborougli. emyde, «. See emyd.
are In competition it may at least be said that the exis-
tence of the two idols diminishes by dividing the force of
,
emulOUSneSS (em
, ,- ,
ij-Ius-neg), n, ThequaUtyof Emydea (e-mid'e-a), «.;>?. p^h.,< Emys (Emyd-)
each suiwrstition. i«*», Eng. in 18th Cent, Ii. bciiif; iiniildiLS. '
^ ^ +...
-ea.]- The name given by
-
Huxley
- to a group
c i
„, -i ,,, . , ,
far sighted summonerof Waraiid Waste Cmulslc (f-mul'sik), a. [< emuls(in) -I'c] In + ^^^ t-helonut. having usually horny cutting
To fruitful strUes and rivalrie, of pace. chem., pertaining to or procured from emulsin jaws. uncovered by lips, the tympanum expos-
Temnton, Idylls of 0)0 King, Ded. — Emufalc add. an acid procured from the albumen of '^' *°^ limbs slenderer than m
Testudinea, with
emulative (em'u-Ia-tiv), a. [<emulate-¥ -ive.] »'""""!«. .
S-clawed digits united by a web only, and the
lii'liii.Ml to emiila'tion; rivaling; disposed to ®™'^**^''*"°'* (?'™"^''*'"''"^*'^^2")' "• The honiv plates of the carapace and plastron well
compete imitatively. ".''^ "^ emulsifying, or the state of being emul- developed. T-he Emydea as thus defined compose the
siticd. river- and marsh-tortoises, and are divisible into two
Vet since her swift departure thence she
He saw th election on himself wonld rest:y emulsify (e-mul'si-fi), v. t. pret. and pp. emul- ""' '«""apin8 and the chelodines. See terrapin,
;
f/^"^'
While all, with rmulatiee seal, demand sifted, v^^r.emuhifying. L.m«to«, pp. (see
[< emydU^ (e-mid'i-an), a. [< Emys {Emytl-) -f-
To fill the nniiilier of th' elected band.
Iloole, tr. of Tasao'a Jerusalem Delivered,
emulsit/n), + -flcare, make.] To make or form .<„„.] of or pertaining to the ^oup ot tor-
v. into an emulsion ; emulsionize.
toises typified by the genus Emys.
Emulative power
Flowed In thy line through nndegenerate veins.
Pancreatic Juice mu&j^M fat emydid (em'i-did), ». A
tortoise of the family
Wnrdtrmrth, Ecclea. Sonnets, 1. itarmn. Vegetable Mould, p. 37.
27. Ennididte.
emnlatively (em'u-ia-tiv-li), adv. In aH emu- emulsin (e-mul'sin), n. [< L. emulsus, pp. of Emydidse (e-mid'i-de), n. pi. [NL., also writ-
lativc inimner. emulgere, railk out, drain out (see emulsion), -I- ten contr. Emytlw; < Emys {Emifd-) +
-idte.] A
-in^i.] In diem., an albuminous or caseous sub-
emulator (em'u-la-tor), n. [F. fmulateur
stance found
= m
family of chelonians, the so-called fresh-wa-
S|i. I'g. emulador =
It. cmulatore. < L. (emulator,
the white part of both sweet ter turtles, fresh-water tortoises, or terrapins.
•
<wmuUiri, emulate: see emulate.] One who and bitter almonds, and making up about one It includes a large series of diverse forms, some of which
emulates ; an imitative rival or competitor. quarter of their entire weight. When pnre it is .in are as terrestrial as the true land-tortoises (Testudinidcs),
odorless and tasteless wliite [Kjwdir, whicli is soluble iu and have a highly convex carapace, though most are
As Virgil rivalled Homer, so Milton was the emulator of water and acts as a ferment, converthig the amygdalln aquatic, with flattened shell. There are about 60 species,
both these. Warburton. Divine Legation, il. | 4. of almonds into oil of bitter almonds, hydrocyanic acid, of numerous genera, agreeing in their hard shell, well-
Full of ambition, an envious emulator nt every man's and a sugar. formed feet adapted iwth for walking an<I swimming,
good |iart«. a secret and villainous contriver against me emulsion (e-mul'shon), n. usually 5-toed i)efore and 4-toed behind, and furnished
[< OP. emulsion, F. with claws. They inhabit northern temperate and trnpi.
OU natural brother. Shak., As you Like it, i. 1. imul.iion Sp. emulsion = Pg. emukcto It. = = cal regions, within which they arc widely distributed.
; :; ;;
identical with, vitellin. r>. -en =OHG. -are (,-en, -on), MHG. G. -en = < e»-l -I- trans. 1. To make able;
afifel.] I,
Emydinal (em-i-di'na), n. [NL., < Gr. l/^lx or leel. -a (-ja) Sw. -a (-ja)= Dan. -e Goth, -an = = furnish with adequate power, ability, means, or
iuitg (e/xvd-, i/iv6-), the fresh-water tortoise, -t- i-jan), the reg. Teut. inf. sufiix, quite different authority; render competent.
-ina^.'i A
genus of fresh-water tortoises, typi- from the L. inf. sufiix, -re (-d-re, -e-re, -e-re,
Temperance gives nature her full play, and enables her
cal of the Emydinidce. -i-re), but cognate with Gr. -evai, later reg. -eiv,
to exert herself in all her force and vigour.
Emydina^ (em-i-di'na), m. pi. [KL., < Emys and orig. dat. of *-ana, orig. noun suffix.
an Spectator, No. 195.
(Emyd-) + -iho^.] Aeubtam.iljotEmydid(Bov (2) ME. -en, often only -e, < AS. -en OS. -are = No science of heat was possible until the invention of
Clemmyidw, typified by the genus Emys, and in- = OFries. Fries. MD. D. MLG. LG. -en OHG. = the thermometer enabled men to measure the degree of
cluding most species of the family, it was limited -an, MHG. G. -en leel. -inn =
Sw. Dan. -en = temperature. J. Fiske, Cosmic Philos., I. 34.
by Gray to those tortoiseswhich have the head covered with = Goth, -are-s, the reg. pp. suffix of strong 2t. To put in an efficient state or condition
a thin hard skin, the zygomatic arch distinct, the fore limbs
covered in front by thin scales and cross-bands, and the
verbs, =
L. -re-«s Gr. -v-of =
Skt. -n-as, an = endow; equip; fit out.
spreading toes strong and webbed. adj. sufiix. (3) < ME. -en-en, -n-en (the final Joy openeth and enableth the heart.
Emydinidse (em-i-din'i-de), n. i)l. [NL., < Emy- syllable being a different suffix, -erO- (1) ), < AS. Sir P. Sidney, Arcadia, 1.
diiM^ + -idw.^ Afamily of soft-shelled tortoises, -n-an, -n-ian (as in fcestnian, > E. fasten, make You are beholden to them, sir, that have taken this
typified by the genus Emydina, including a few fast) =
Goth, -n-are, prop, intr., as in Goth. pains for you, and my friend, Master Truewit, who en-
fullnan, become full, in verbs formed on the abled them for the business. B. Jonson, Epiccene, v. 1.
-Asiatic species referred usually to the Triony-
chidce, having the edge of the disk strengthened pp. of strong verbs, -an-s AS. and E. -eii, = = Syn. 1. To empower, qualify, capacitate.
by a series of internal bones, the skull oblong, etc. See (2), above. (4) ME. -en, often -e, in II. intrans. To give ability or competency.
convex, and swollen, and the palate with a cen- later ME. a general pi. suffix, in earlier ME. For matter of policy and government, that learning
tral groove. Also Emydinadce. confined to ind. and subj. pret. pi. and subj. should rather hurt than enable thereunto is a thing very
pres., the ind. pres. (and impv. pi.) having -eth, improl)able. Bacon, Advancement of Learning, i. 16.
emydoid (em'i-doid), a. and n. I. a. Resem-
bling or related to a tortoise of the genus Emys; < AS. -ath, -iath. The AS. verb-forms with pi. enablementf (e-na'bl-ment), ». [< enable +
belonging to the family Emydidw. term, -re were
(in all 3 persons) subj. pres. -en -meret] The act of enabling.
H. n. A tortoise of the family Eviydidte. (-ien), ind. pret. -ore (-an), subj. -en. Like forms
Learning hath no less power and efficacy in enable-
. . .
Emydoidae (em-i-doi'de), n. pi. [NL., < Emys are found in the other Teut. tongues, being worn- ment towards martial and military virtue and prowess.
(Emyd-) + -oidce.'] A family of tortoises, typi- down and assimilated forms of elements orig. of Bacon, Advancement of Learning, i. 82.
fied by the genus Emys, including the Clemmy- different origin.] A
termination of various ori- enach
(en'ach), M. [Gael, ejreeac/f, boimty.] In
ida and Cistudinidce, and divided into 5 subfam- gin, used in the formation of verbs, (a) The in- old Scots lain, amends or satisfaction for a crime,
finitive sufiix, now obsolete, as in Middle English singen,
ilies. X. Agassiz. See cut under Cistudo. escapen, pullen, etc., modern English sing, escape, pull,
fault, or trespass.
Emydosauria (em^i-do-sa'ri-a), n. pi.
[NL., < etc. In late Middle English the -n fell away {singe, es- enact (e-nakf), V. t. [< ME. enacten; < ere-1 +
Gr. iutif or the fresh-water
ifiv^ (e/ivS-, ifivS-j, cape, pulle, etc.), but the -e continued to be pronounced, act.'] 1. To decree; establish by the will of
tortoise,+ aavpoc, a lizard.] One of several at least optionally, until near the end of the Middle Eng-
lish period in modern English the -e, though always si-
the supreme power; pass into a statute or es-
names of the order Crocodilia : so called from ;
Emys (em'is), n. [NL., < Gr. efivc or l/iiiCj the fell away (risen or rise, writen or write, etc.) hence in mod-
hatli beene prov'd that God hath still reserv'd to himselfe
fresh-water tortoise.] genus of tortoises, A ern English many coexisting forms in -en and -e silent or
;
the right of enacting Church-Government.
Milton, Cnurch-Government, i. 2.
giving name to the Emydidce. The name has been absent, as broken and broke, written and writ, beaten and
variously employed (a) For fresh-water tortoises in gen-
:
beat, aunken and sunk, etc. In most of these pairs there is It was enacted that, for every ton of Malmsey or Tyne
eral of the family Clemmyidx, such as E. lutaria of Eu- a slight differentiation of use (as sunken, drunken, adj., wine brought into England, ten good bowstaves should also
rope, now generally called Clemmyscaspica, and numerous sunk, drank, pp.), or one form is obsolete (writ, pp. etc.) be imported. , Encyc. Brit., II. 372.
American species. (6) Restricted to certain box-tortoises or regarded as " incorrect " (broke, spoke, etc.), or is merely
vulgar (riz for riseji, etc.). In some cases the past par- 2. To act ; perform ; effect.
belonging to the family now called Cistudinida, such as
the box-tortoise of Europe, Emyg europcea, which is the ticiple in -en is modern, the verb being originally weak The king enacts more wonders than a man,
emys of Aristotle and the ancients, and the Emys blan- (with past participle in -ed2), as in imm, pp. of wear. Daring an opposite to every danger.
dingi of North America. In most of such instances the older form in -erf2 is still in Shak., Rich. III., v. 4.
prevalent use, as in sewed or sewn, sawed or sauni, proved
en (en), «. [< ME. "en, < AS. *en, < L. en, < e, or pi-oven, etc. the -ed^ being in some instances absorbed,
,
3. To act the part of ; represent on or as on
the usual assistant vowel, -t- w.] 1. The name as in hid or hidden, chid or chidden, (c) A suffix form- the stage.
of the letter JV, n. It is rarely written, the sym- ing verbs from adjectives, as weaken, /atten, etc. Origi-
Ham. And what did you enact ?
bol N, n, being used instead. 2. In printing, a — nally such verbs were only intransitive ('become weak,
fat,' etc.), but now they are also transitive (' make weak,
Pol. I did enact Julius Ccesar I was killed i' the Capi- :
space half as wide as an em, sometimes used tol Brutus killed me. Shak., Hamlet, iii. 2.
;
fat,' etc.). (d) In Middle English, a plural suffix of verbs
as a standard in reckoning the amount of a as, they aren, weren, sayen, singen, sungen, etc. It is now Enacting clause, the introductory clause of a legislative
compositor's work. See emX, 2. reduced to silent -e or entirely lost. bill or act, beginning "Be it enacted by," etc. A common
en-l. [ME. en-, < OF. en-, rarely F. en- =
Sp. -en2. [< ME. -ere, < AS. -en D. -en OHG. strike = =
means of defeating a bill in its initial stages is a motion to
Pg. en- = w-2), an ad- MHG. 6. -en, etc.,
It. en-, in-, < L. in- (see Goth, -in-s, -ein-s L.
out its enacting clause, which if successful carries
=
all the rest with it.
=
verbial or prepositional prefix, conveying the -i-nu-s Gr. -i-vo-g = =
Skt. -i-na-s, an adj. suffix, enactt, re. [ME.; < enact, v.] An enactment;
idea, according as the verb is one of rest or of radically identical with -e«l (2), pp. suffix.]
an act. A
motion, of existence 'in' a place or thing, or of suffix forming adjectives from nouns of mate-
This enacte so to endure by force of this present yelde
motion, direction, or inclination 'into' or 'to' a rial, as as7(erei, ashen^, earthen, oaken, wooden, [gildj. English Gilds (E. E. T. S.), p. 404.
place or thing, < in, prep., in, into, =
E. in: golden, sometimes simply -re, as cedarn, eldern,
+
see jni. In later L. »»- usually became im-, silvern, etc. Many such words ai-e obsolete, dialectic, enactive (e-nak'tiv), a. [< enact -iie.] Hav-
and so in Eom. en- usually becomes em-, before or archaic, as elTtien, treen, clayen, hairen, etc. many are ing power to enact, or establish as a law. ;
About her necke a sort of faire rubies occupation is the laying on of enamels.
That never hail did Harvest preludice,
In white floures of right fine enamaUe,
That never frost, nor snowe, nor slippery ice The Assembly of Ladies, I. 534. She put forth unto him a little rod or wand all fiery,
The fields tn-atjd. such as painters or enamelters use.
Sytventer, tr. of Du Bartas's Weeks, ii., Eden. 4. Any smooth, glossy surface resembling ena- Hollands tr. of Plutarch, p. 461.
(e-nal-i-6r'nis), n. [< Gr. ivdhoc, in, mel, but produced by means of varnish or lac- It is certain that in the reigns of the two first Edwards
Enaliomis
aXf, the sea), + + quer, or in some other way not involving vitri- there were Greek enamellers in England, who both prac-
on, or of the sea (< iv, in,
A
genus of fossil Cretaceous fication: as, the enamel of enameled leather, tised and taught the art. Walpote, Anecdotes, I. ii., note.
opwcr a bird.]
birds, discovered by Barrett in 1858 in the Upper
paper, slate, etc. —
5. In anat., the hardest part Enamelers' copper. See copper.
Greensand of Cambridge, England. It was de- of "a tooth; the very dense, smooth, glistening enamel-germ (e-nam' el- jferm), n. The epi-
scribed by Seeley in 1866 under the name Pelagomi* {P. substance which crowns a tooth or coats a part thelial germ of the enamel of teeth ; the rudi-
barretti), which, being preoccupied by PelagomUot Lartet of its suirf ace distinguished from dentin and ment of the enamel-organ
:
(1857), was renamed Enaiiomu by Seeley In 1869. The re- tioiacement. It is always superficial, and represents a enamelist, enamelllst (e-nam' el-ist), )i. [<
mains appear to be those of a tme bird, resembling a pen- special modification of epithelial substance. It is usually enamel + -ist.'\ Same as e«a/He/€/*.
guin in some respecta. white, sometinies red as in the front teeth of most ro-
One of the Enalio- gnamel-klln
»"«""»-* (e-nam'el-kil), H. A kiln in which
enaliosaur (e-nal'i-o-sar), n. dents, or reddish-black, as m the teeth of most shrews. v
„™„„„j <.„ „ i„„,
.-(iiiriii. See cit under (oo(A. pottery, glass, etc., are exposed to a low i,„„f
heat,
Enaliosauria (e-nal'i-o-sa'ri-a), n. pi. [NL., < All the bones of the body are covered with a periosteum, such as is suitable for fixing enamel-colors,
Gr. fvaz-iof, Uviug in tlie sea (< h, = E. in, + except the teeth where it ceases, and an enanul of ivory,
; gold, etc. Such kilns are generally built of large earth-
which saws and files will hardly touch, comes into its enware slabs, having flues through whicli the smoke and
a.l(,the sea), + naiyjoc, lizard.] A siiperordinal place. Paley, Nat Theol., xL flame of the fire pass without entering the body of the
group of gigantic aquatic Mesozoic reptiles, kiln.
6. Figuratively, gloss; polish.
with a very long body, naked leathery skin, enamellar, enameller, etc. See enamelar, etc.
paddle-like limbs, numerous teeth in long jaws, There is none of the ingenuity of Fiiicaja in the thought,
none of the h«-d and brilliant «na™rf of Petrarch In the
gnamel-membrane (e-nam'el-mem''bran), n.
and biconpavo vertebrte. The group contained the style. Maeaulay. •^^g^f^y^^ „f cylindrical cells of the enamel-
ichthyosaurians, plesiosaurians, and other marine men- organ of a tooth which stand on the surface
iters now placed in different orders. The term is now 7. In cosmetics, a coating applied to the skin.
of the dentinal part of a developing tooth.
littleused ; it sometimes, however, still covers the two giving the appearance oF a beautiful complex!
current orders IckthyoMauria and Pletiotauria, or Ichthy- Sn.A,.>.J..
ion.— Battersea .n.™.,
enamel-OTgan (e-nam_'el-6r"gan), «. Theenam-
enamel, „a kind of,„,rf»ce
surface enan,e^nr„.
enamel pro-
npteni'iia and Sauropterygia.
duced in Battersea, London, in the eighteenth century. el-germ of a tooth after it has separated from
enaliosanrian (e-nal'i-o-sft'ri-an), a. and M. I. The pieces of this enamel are usually decorated by a the epithelium of the mouth and forms a cap
a. Pertaining to the Enalioaaviria. transfer process simitar to that used for i»orcelain and over the dentinal portion of the tooth, it con-
H. n. One of the Enaliotauria; an enalio- English delft; they include needle-ca.ses, etuis, and es- sists of a lining of cylindrical cells and a covering of cu-
pecially plaques with portraits.— Canton enamel, a va- bical cells, and is wadded with stellate cells in abundant
saur.
riety of surface-enamel in which the ground is usually jelly-like intercc lliilar substance.
enallage (e-nal'a-je), n. [= F. enaliage 8p. = plahi white, yellow, or light blue, and is decorated with enamel-painting (e-nam'el-pan"ting), n. Paint-
cnalage =
Pg. It. enallage, < _L. enallage, < Gr. enamel paintings in many colors, representmg conven- *^"^r 5"'" i"° ..i ._-^.„:.ii.. ..„„„
ing in vitrifiable colors, especially upon a sur-
ivaX>M-)-ii, an interchange, < haAXdoBeiv, inter- tional flowers, scrolls, etc. Vases, Incense-burners, etc.,
are made of it, and it is one of the most successful of mod- face of porcelain, glass, or metal, the work be-
change, < iv, in, -I- iOy^aativ, change, < a/j.o^, em Chinese artistic industries.— Champlevd enamel. ing subsequently fired in a muffle or kiln. See
other: see alUy-.] In gram., a figure consisting See def. 3, and champlec^.^CMaowxi enamel. See enamel.
in the substitution of one form, inflection, or def. 3, and cfui«onni<.— Enajnel k Jour, a kind of en-
[Sp. (= It.
part of speech for another. Special names are given amel in which there is imoackground, the enamel be- enamoradot (e-nam-o-ra'do), n.
to subdivlsioits of this figure. The sul>stltution of one part
ing made to fill all the space between tlie narrow bars innamorato, q. v.), <' ML. inamoratus, pp. of
of speech for another is antitiuria ; that of one case for
or wires which form the design. Such enamel when trans- enamorar, inamorare (> Sp., etc.), put in love:
lucent shows as a pattern seen by transmitted light.—
another is antiutosit. Interchange of the functions of two see enamour.'] One deeply in love.
cases in one phrase Is a form of hypaUane. Enallage of BnJUnsl-COlnnUlB, the minute six-sided prisms of which
sender can hardly lie illustrated In English. Antlptosia the enamel of the teeth is composed. Also called eiutrnel An ^Homorodo neglects all other things to accomplish
u exempllMed in the colloqalal " It's me " for *' It Is I."" )>rwnu,mam«<-n>ds,and ma in<2-y!6er«.— Enamel-cuticle, his delight. Sir T. Uerbert, Travels in Africa, p. 74.
Enallage of number is seen In the royal and literary " we a thin lioroy cuticle covering the outer surface of the en- ,>
,
enamOUT (e-nam or^^V. rAlso wntxen,
L^ISO writtpn hut
Dui .
t.
for " I," and in our modem established "you " for "thou."
amel in unworn teeth. Also called ,Va»»i;/(/i> m«m(n-<iJif
and erUieula (Until.— Enamel en basse iallle, a variety rarely, enamor ; < ME. enamoured, pp., < OF.
Not changing one word (or another, by their accidents of champlev^ enamel in which the background of the low enam'ourer, enamorer, ¥. cnamourcr = Pr. Sp.
or cases, as the KtuUlat^e.
PuUenham, Arte of Eng. Poesie, p. 143.
ered or sunken parts is sculptured with figures in relief, Pg. enamorar, namorar =
It. innamorare, < ML.
the enamel Itself being transparent to allow them to be
seen.— Enamel ea tallle d'^pargne, a variety of champ-
inamorare, put in love, inamorari, bo in love,
Enallostega (en-a-los'te-gft), n. pi. [NL. (F. < L. in, in, -I- amor (> F. amour, etc.), love:
leve enamel in which the Held is almost wholly cut away
KmiUii.shijues, lyOrbigny), < Gr. fv, in, WJof, + or hollowed 'nit for tlo' receplioii of the enamel, leaving see amor, amorous.] To inflame with love;
other (one besides), riyo^, roof.] +
division A only narrow ilivicling lines of the metallic background.— charm captivate used chiefly in the past par-
; :
of foraminifers, having the cells disposed in two Flocked enamel, enamel used for ornamenting a glass
surface whicli liM l)een made dull by grinding or by the ticiple, with of or with before the person or
alternating rows. thing: as, to be enamoured of a lady; to be
am-
use of acid. —Glass enamtl, an opatjue or semi-opaque
enambusht (en-am'b<i»h), i\ t. [< en-i -f-
glass having a milky appearance, due to the addition of enamoured of or with books or science.
bush.] To place or conceal in ambush. binoxid of tin. It Is used for window transparencies and
What trust is in these times?
"porcelain" lamp-shades.— Incrusted enamel, disks or
Etplor d embattled ran, the deep'ning line,
th'
similar small flat pieces of enameled metal inlaiil in a
They that when Richard liv'd would have him die,
Th tnaminuh'd phalanx, and the springing mine.
larger surface, as of chased melal or filigree. Llmoges — Are now ttecome enamour'd on his grave.
Cawthom, Elegy un Capt. Hughes. Shak., 2 Hen. IV., 1. 3.
enamttU * variety of surface-enamel produced especially
enamel (e-nam'el), n. [< ME. ettamaile (with at Limose* In fnace, In which vessels and decorative death 01), !
pieces of various kinds and sizes are ornamented with pic- I am not yet enamour'd of this breath
preti.x en-, due to the verb enamelen), prop.
torial subjects painted in many colors and in gold. This .So much nut I dare leave it.
'umaile, amel.amell, amelle, amall, aumayi, lat- work reached Us greatest excellence at the time of the Fletcher, Faithful Shepherdess, iv. 1.
er ammell (> D. G. email Dan. emaille Sw. = = Renaissance. Or should she, confident,
emalj), < OP. esmaU, P. imail, enamel: see enamel (e-nam'el), r. pret. and pp. enameled
; Descend with all her winning charms begirt
a)n«i.] 1. In eeram., a vitrified substance, or enamelled, ppr. enameling or enamelling. [< To ejiamottr, as the zone of Venus once
either transparent or opaque, applied as a coat- ME. enameten, enaumaylen, < OF. enamailler, Wrought that effect on Jove. MMon, P. R., 11. 214.
ing to pottery and porcelain of many kinds. enameler, enamaler (in pp.), < en- esmailler, > + He became passionately enamoured of this shadow of a
Irving.
Itu simply a fusilile kind of glass, and when transparent ME. amelen, amilen (see amel, v.), F. imailler (> dream.
Is commonly called glau. A vitreous coating of similar D. emaiUeren G. =
emailliren Dan. emaillere =
= Syn.
_„_. To- fascinate,
- ^ bewitch.
, .^, r, .
+
,
character i^applied to a class of Iron utensils for cooking,
= 8w. emaUera) =
Sp. Pg. esmaltar =
It. smal- enamouritet (e-nam o-nt), «. [< enamour
made
to serve other useful purposes.
A
-ite^, asm favorite.]
etc., anil is [Ra
iare.]
lover.
2. In the fine arts, a vitreous substance or glass, tare, enamel; from the noun.] '•1 I. trantf. 1.
To lay enamel upon cover or decorate with Is this no small servitude for an enamourite.
opaque or transparent, and variously colored, ;
enarch^ (en-ar-sha'), a. [F., < en- + arche, organized into a body politic, usually called the elan or
camp settle in temporary quarters, formed by ;
gens. J. )V, Powell, Science, V. 347.
arch: see arch^.'\ In her., same as enarched; tents or huts, as an army or a company.
also, rarely, same as arched. enation (f-na'shon), n. [< L. as if *enatio(n-), encamp round about the taber-
The Levites . . . shall
enarched (en-archf), p. a. [Pp. of enarch, v. < enatus, pp. of enasci, be born: see enate, nacle. Num. i. 60.
Cf. enarche.']In her., com- enascent.] 1. In bot., the production of out- Encamp against the city and take
it. 2 Sam. xii. 28.
bined with or supported by growths or appendages upon the surface of an The four and twentieth of July, the King in Person, ac-
anarch. A chevron enarched organ. —
2. In ethnol., maternal relationship. companied with divers of the Nobility, came to Calais;
has a round or pointed arch enaunterf, adv. [For en aunter, after ME. in and the six and twentieth encamped before Boulogne on
the North-side. Baker, Chronicles, p. 292.
beneath it, seeming to sup- aunter, peradventure in, F. en, in; aunter,
:
port it at the angle aventure, chance, adventure.] Lest that. He was encamped under the trees, close to tiie stream.
Bend H. James, Jr., Pass. Pilgrim, p. 464.
enarched. Same as t>ei\d archy Anger nould let him speake to the tree,
(whicli see, under bejtd^). Enaunter his rage mought cooled bee. H. trans. To form into or fix in a camp
enargite (en-ar'jit), n. [< Gr. Spenser, Shep. Cal., February. place in temporary quarters.
Argent, a'Chevron En-
ivapyiig, visible, palpable, < hv, arched Gules. en avant (on a-von'). [F. : en, < L. inde, hence; Beyond the river we'll encamp ourselves.
in, + apyd^, bright, dte^.'] + avant, before, forward: see avant, advance.] Shak., Hen. V., iii. 6.
A sulpharsenite of copper occurring in small Forward; onward. Sultan Selim encamped his army in this place when he
black orthorhombic crystals, also massive, in enavigatet (e-nav'i-gat), v. i. and *. [< L. ena-
came to besiege Cairo.
Pococke, Description of the East, I. 23.
Peru, Chili, Colorado, etc. vigattts, pp. of enavigare, sail out, sail over, <
enarmf (en-arm'), V. [< ME. enarmen, < OF. e, out, + navigare, sail see navigate.] To sail :
encampment (en-kamp'ment), n. [< encamp
enarmer, arm, equip, provide with arms or ar- out or over. Cockeram. + -ment.] 1. The act
of forming and occupy-
mor, provide, as a shield, with straps, < en, in, enb-. See emb-. ing a camp; establishment in a camp.
+ armes, arms: see arm^.'\ I. trans. 1. To en barbette (on' bar-bet'). [F.] In barbette We may calculate that a square of about seven hundred
yards was sufiicient for the encampment of twenty thou-
equip with arms or armor. so as to fire over the parapet. See barbette. sand Romans. Gibbon, Decline and Fall, i.
How mony knightes there come & kynges enanned. enbaset, v. t. Same as embase. 2. The place where a body of men is encamped
Destruction of Troy (E. E. T. S.), 1. 87. enbastet, v. t. [< en-i + baste^.] To steep or a camp.
I will, by God's grace, fully set forth the same, to enarni imbue. Davies. Wlien a general bids the martial train
you to withstand the assaults of the papists herein, if you It is not agreeable for the Holy Ghost, which may not Spread their encampment o'er the spacious plain.
mark well and read over again that wliich I now write. suffer the Church to err in interpreting the Scriptures, to Thick rising tents a canvas city build. Gay, Trivia.
J. Bradford, Letters (Parker Soc, 1863), U. 142. permit the same notwithstanding to be oppressed with
superstition, and to be enbasted with vain opinions. encankert (en-kang'k^r), V. t. [< en-1 -f- can-
2. In old cookery, to lard. Philpot, Works (Parker Soc), p. 379. ker.] To corrode ; canker.
The crane is enarmed f ul wele I wot What needeth me for to extoU his fame
With larde of porke. enbaumet, enbawmet, v. t. Obsolete forms of
With my rude pen eticankered all with rust?
Liber Cure Cocoruiji, p. 29. embalm. Skelton, Elegy on the Earl of Northumberland.
enbibet, v. t. A Middle English form of imbibe.
H. intrans. To arm; put encantMs (en-kau'this),
n. [NL., < Gr. iyKavdig,
on armor or take weapons. enblanchf, v. t. An obsolete form of emblanch. a tumor in the corner of the eye, < ev, in, +
en bloc (on blok). [P.: e», in; 6Zoc, block: see Kovdoc, the comer of the eye: see cant^.] In
While shepherds they enarine vnus'd in and blocki.] In block in a lump as, the ;
pathol., a small tumor or excrescence growing
:
to danger.
of Du Bartas's
shares will be sold en bloc.
T. Hudson, tr. from the inner angle of the eye.
[Judith, i. 371. We are bound to take Nature en bloc, with all her laws
and all her cruelties, as well as her beneficences. en cantiel. [Heraldic P.: P. en, in; "cantiel,
enarmet, ». [OF., < enarmer, Contemporary Rev., LIII. 81. appar. var. of OP. cantel, corner: see cantle.]
provide, as a shield, with
enboseif, v. t. An obsolete form of emboss^. In her., placed aslant that is, with the pale —
straps: see enarm.'] The not vertical to the beholder, but sloping, usual-
enbose^t, v. t. Same as emboss^.
gear for holding the shield
enbracet, v. An obsolete form of embrace. ly with the top toward the left said of an es- :
by passing the arm through enbraudet, v. t. Middle English form of em- cutcheon, which is often so placed in seals.
A
straps or the like. broid. encapsulate (en-kap'su-lat), V. t. ; pret. and pp.
enarmed (en-armd'), a. [< enbreamet, a. [Irreg. < en-i + breame, var. of encapsulated, ppr. encapsnlating. [< en-1 +
en-l + armed.'] In her., hav- brim*, a.] Strong; sharp. Nares. capsule + -ate^.] To inclose in a capsule.
ing arms (that is, horns, ^.tH^T^^t'ti encapsulation (en-kap-si\-la'shon), «. [< en-
We can be content (for the health of our bodies) to drink
hoofs, etc.) of a diflferent Gear. (From Viollet-
^ sharpe potions, receive aud indure the operation of en- capsulatc + -ion.] The act of surrounding with
COlor from that of the body. biiierfran9ais.")
"
breame purge», Horthbrookt, Dicing (1677), a capsule.
;
[NL., prop, 'encarpum, L. only pi. encarpa, < encansttun (en-kas'- encephalon and atrophy.] Pertaining to or af-
Gr. h/Kapira, pi., festoons of fruit on friezes or tum), H. [< Gr. f}- flicted with atrophy of the brain.
KavcTov, neut. of iy- Part of a Medieval Pavement of encephalic (en-se-fal'ik or en-sef'a-lik), a.
capitals of columns, neut. pi. of tynapTToq, con- Encaustic Tiles. — Church of St.
[<
taming fruit, < iv, in, -t- mp-Koq, fruit.] In arch., KavcTo^, burnt in see Pierre-sur-Dive, Normandy. From
: (
encephalon -ic; + =
F. encephalique Sp. en- =
a sctUptured ornament in imitation of a gar- encaustic] VioUct-le-Duc's "Diet, de r Archi-
The en- tecture." )
ccfdlico =
Pg. encephalico, < NL. encephalicus,
land or festoon of fruits, leaves, or flowers, amel of a tooth. < encephalon, the brain: see encephalon.] 1.
or of other objects, suspended between two encave, incave (en-, in-kav'), v. t. pret. and Pertaining to the encephalon; cerebral. 2.
;
—
points. The garland is of greatest size in the middle, pp. encaved, incaced, ppr. encamng, incaning. Situated in the head or within the cranial cav-
and diminishes gradually to the points of suspeusion, from [< en-1, in-, +cave^.] To hide in or as in a ity; intracranial.
cave or recess. encephalitic (en-sef-a-lit'ik), a. [< encepha-
Do but encave yourself, litis +
-jc] Pertaining to or afflicted with en-
And mark the Seers, the gibes, and notable scorns. cephalitis.
That dwell in every region of his face.
Shak., Othello, iv. 1.
encephalitis (en-sef-a-li'tis), n. [NL., < en-
An abrupt turn in the course of the ravine placed a cephalon -i- -itis.] Iii ^afftoi!., inflammation of
protecting cliff between us and the gale. We
were com- the brain.
pletely eneaved. Kane, Sec. Grinn. Exp., II. 264.
encephalocele (en-sef'a-lo-sel), n. [= F. en-
-ence, -ency. See -anee, -ancu, and -ent. c^phalocele =
Sp. encefdlocele, < Gr. eyKi(pah)g,
enceinte (on-sanf), »• [F., (enceinte (< L. in- the brain, KTjhi, tumor.] +
In pathol., hernia
cincta), fern. pp. of enceindre Pr. eneenher = of the brain. =
It. incingere, < L. incingere, gird about, surround, encephalocoele (en-sef'a-lo-sel), n. [< Gr. ey-
< in, in, + cingere, gird: see ceint, cincture, and Kf^/of, the brain, -t- icoiXof, hollow.] In anat.,
Encaipuc— Fron PmUx«o NIccoUiU, Rome.
cf. «ii«tii«(Kre.J 1. In /or<., an inolosure; the the entire cavity of the encephalon, consisting
which the ends generally hang down. The encarpus is wall or rampart which surrounds a place, often of the several coeli» or ventricles and their con-
•omettmea conip(Med of an Imitation of drapery similarly composed of bastions or towers and curtains. necting passages. [Rare.]
disposed, and fretjuently of an assemblage of mnslcal in- The enceinte with the space inclosed within it encephaloid (en-sef 'a-loid), a. [= F. encepha-
struments, or implements of war or of the chaae, accord-
is called the body of the place. Uiide, < Gr. cyKe<j>a?.oc, the brain, -I- ciSo^, form.]
Iiil; to the purp'tne to which the building It ornaments la
iippritpiiatfti. The best authorities estimate the number of habita- Resembling the matter of the brain Encepha-
encase, encasement. See inease, incasement. tions |in El-Medlnah] at about 1500 within the enceinte, loid cancer, a soft, rapidly growing, and very malignant
and those in the suburb at 1000. carcinoma or cancer, with abundant epithelial cells and
encastainent (en-kash'ment), n. [< 'encash (< R. F. Burton, El-Hedinah, p. 2S9. scanty stroma so named from its brain-like appearance
:
'n-l + ctish^) + -ment.l "In £ng. banking, pay- and ctmsistence. Also called carcinoma moUe and medttl-
2. The close or precinct of a cathedral, abbey, tary cancer.
ment in ca-sh of a note, draft, etc.
castle, etc.
encastage (en-kis'tjj), n. [Appar. < ei»-i -I- encephalology (en-sef-a-lol'o-ji), n. [< NL. en-
cosfi, c, -I- -age.} 'the arrangement in a pot-
enceinte (on-sanf), a. [F., fern, of eneeint (< L. cephalologia, < Gr. iyKtifako^, the brain, -I- -Myia,
incinctus), pp. of enceindre, < L. incingere, gird
tery- or porcelain-kiln of the pieces to be < Aiyciv, speak see -ology.] A description of the:
B. Taylor, Ijinds of the Saracen, p. 123. (a) In Haeckel's classification, a group of mol- the brain is nat-
luscous or soft-bodied animals, composed of the urally divisible,
BnMnstlc painting (a) The art of painting with wax as
a vemcle strictly applicable only to painting executed or
:
snails ((,'ochlides) and cuttles (Cephalopoda): as the prosen-
flnisheii by the agency of heat, but applle<t also to modern one of his two main divisions of MoUusca, the cephalon, dien-
methods of paiiitlnE In wax. In which the wax-colors are other being Acephala, or the brachiopods and cephalon, etc.
dissolved in a vuiatlTe oil and used in the ordinary way. In
lamellibranchs. (6) As used by E. R. Lankes- [Rare.]
the h<)t pnx-eas colored sticks of wax and resin are melted
on a heated palette, applied urith the bnish, and afterward ter, a prime division or branch of the MoUusca,
Five en-
mixieled and anitad with a heated Iron and spatula. After represented by two series, Lipoglossa and Echi- cephalicdefinite segments
tli>' turfarc has become cool and hard, it Is rubbed with a
noglossa, as together contrasted with Lipocepha- or encephalomeres.
"le over with a clean linen cloth. According
t r-thod, tested by Count CayluH, the ground of
la. The Encephala in this sense contain the Wilder, New York Diagram of Vertebrate Encephalon: upper
gastropods, cephalopods, pteropods, and other [MedicalJour., figure in longitudinal vertical section and
1 is first nibbed over with a piece of beeswax,
(XLI. 327. lower figure in horizontal section.
and a(Ui«;ird with chalk or whiting, In order to form forms, (c) A group of mollusks including those Mb, mid-brain in front of it all is fore- :
a surface on wliiih the colon will adhere. The colors which have a head. Svnonymous with Cepha- encephalon brain, behind it all is hind-brain Lt, lamina ;
are mixed simply with water, and are applied in the ordi- tenninatis, represented by the heavy black
latn or Cephalophora (whichsee) : distinguished (en-sef'a-lon), line in upper figure Olj, olfactory lobes
nary t'ay. when the pictnre is dry. It is heated, and the :
wax softens and abaorbs the colors, forming a Arm ami from Acephala. n.; pi. encephala Hy**p, cerebral hemispheres THE, thala- ;
durable coating. Encaustic painting was in very common encephala'"^ (en-sef'a-lft), n. Plural of enoepha- (-la). l=F.en- riura Py, pituitary body FM, or M, fora- ; :
a place midway between paintings in oil and In fresco. encephalalgia (en-sef-a-lal' ji-»), n. [NL. (= P. encephalo It. =
CC, crura cerebri Cb, cerebellum
Varolii MO, medulla oblongata /, ol-
Pt^, ; :
encq>halalgic), < Gr. eyKi^Ao^, within the head encefalo, < NL. pons
: :
(*) In e^-ain., nn arbitrary name given by Josiah Wedg- factory nerves //, optic nerves ///, point : ;
wood to his attcmpb-'l Imitation of the painted decora- (see encephalon), + iXyoc, pain, ache.] Same encephalon, also of exit from brain of the oculimotores: /f,
tion of Oreek vases, the effort tielng to pro<lilce llre<l colors of the pathetic! ;^/, of the abducentes; K. :
d or incrusted In clay of one color In a ground of clay of iyiiii^'^.oi:, within the head (as a noun, the edible brain, prop. adj. the iter e tertlo ad quartum ventriculuni-
,; — ; ;
;
KiipaAo^. the brain, + TrdSof, suffering.] In pa- tise sorcery or witchcraft on subdue by charms ; = S3ni. 1. Charm, fascination, magic, spell, sorcery, nec-
thol., disease of the encephalon. or spells; hold as by a spell; bewitch. romancy, witchery, witchcraft. — 2. Kapture, transport,
ravisinnent.
encephalospinal (en-sefa-lo-spi'nal), a. [< By the Witchcraft of fair Words, [Rowena] so enchant- enchantress (en-chan'tres), n. [< ME. en-
NL. encephalon, bi-ain, + L'. spina, sjiine, + -a?.] ed the British Nobility that lier Husband Vortigern was
chauntercbse, <.0F. "enchanteresse, F. enchan-
Pertaining to the brain and the spinal cord. again establislied in the Kingdom. Baker, Chronicles, p. 4.
encephalotomy (en-sef-a-lot'o-mi), ». [< Gr. John thinks them all enchanted; he inquires if Nick teresse = It. incantatrice, < LL. *incantatrix,
had not given them some intoxicating potion. Arbuthnot. fem. of incantator, an enchanter: see enchant-
f;«p<i>.oc. thebrain, + roiiii, a cutting.] Dis-
section of the brain. 2.To impart a magical quality or effect to; er.] A woman who enchants, as by magic
spells, beauty, manner, or the like ; a sorceress.
encephalous (en-sef'a-lus), a. [< Gr. iyni^a/M^, change the nature of by incantation or sorcery
within the head see encephalon.
: The right bewitch, as a thing. From this enchantress all these ills are come. Dryden.
form for this meaning is cephalous. ] In conch . And now about the caldron sing. enchantryt, «. [ME. enchantery, enchaunterye,
having a head, as most moUusks of or pertain- ; Like elves and fairies in a ring. < OP. cnchanterie, enchantment, < enchanter,
ing to the Encephala : an epithet applied to mol- Enchanting all that you put in.
Shak., Macbeth, iv. 1.
enchant: see enchant.] Enchantment.
lusks, excepting the iMmcUiliriDicliia, which are
3. To delight in a high degree; charm; fasci- Tho the clerke hadde yseid hys enchaunterye,
said, in distinction, to be acephalous. Ther fore Silui Iiym let sle.
enchace^t, v. t. See enchase^. nate. Robert of Gloucester, p. 10.
Bid me discourse ; I will enchant thine ear.
enchace-t, *'• *• An obsolete spelling of enchase^. Shak., Venus and Adonis, 1. 145. encharget (en-charj'), v. t. [< ME. enchargen,
enchafet (en-chaf '), v. [< ME. encJiaufen, < en- + < OF. encharger, enchargier, encarchier, encar-
The prospect such as might enchant despair.
chaufen, chafe, as if ult. < L. incalefacere, make Cowper, Ketirement, I. 469. hier, etc., < ML. incaricare, load, charge, < L.
warm or hot: see p»-l and chafe. I. trans. '\
= Syn. 3. Enchant, Charm, Fascinate, captivate, enrap- in, in, + ML. caricare, earricare ( >r. encharger
1. To make warm or hot; heat. ture, carry away. To fascinate is to bring under a spell, = Pr. Sp. encargar = Pg. encarregar = lt. incari-
Ever the gretter merite shal he have that most re- as by the power of the eye ; to enchant and to charm are care, < charger, etc.), charge, load: see en-l and
wikkede eiichaujiiig or ardure of this sinne.
BtrejTieth the to bring under a spell by some more subtle and mysterious
Chaucer, Parson's Tale. power. This difference in the literal affects also the fig- charge.] To give in charge or trust.
urative senses. Enchant is stronger than charm. All gen- I have dispatched away Mr. Meredith, his Majesty's sec-
So in the body of man, when tlie blond is moved, it in-
erally imply a pleased state in that whicli is affected, but retary of the embassy here, by the Catherine yacht, and
vadeth the vitall and spirituall vessels, and being set on
fire, it encha^eth the whole body.
fascinate less often than the others. encharqed with my main pacquet to the secretary.
Holland, tr. of Plutarch, p. 694. So stands the statue that enchants the world. Sir W. Temple, To my Lord Treasurer, July 20, 1678.
Thomson, Summer, 1. 1346. His countenance would express the spirit and the pas-
2. To ehafeorfret; provoke; enrage; irritate.
was encharged with.
sion of tile part he Jefrey.
The books that charmed us in youth recall the delight
And
yet as rough. ever afterwards. Alcolt, Table-Talk, i.
Their royal blood enchafd, as the rud'st wind, encharget (en-charj'), w. l<. encharge, v.] An
That by the top doth take the mountain pine Many a man is fascinated by the artifices of composi- injunction a charge.
;
And make him stoop to the vale. tion,who fancies that it is the subject which had operated
Shak., Cymbeline, iv. 2. so potently. De Quincey, Style, i. A nobleman being to passe thi'ough a water, commaund-
Mackenzie as a bird before a boa- ed his trunipetter to goe before and sound the depth of it
Seizes the rough, enchafed northern deep. She sat under Mrs.
constrictor, doomed — fluttering fascinated. who to shew himselfe very mannerly, refus'd this encharge,
J, Baillie. and push'd the nobleman himselfe forward, saying: No,
To become warm. Thackeray, Newcomes, Ixxiii.
n. intrans. sir, not I, your lordsliip shall pardon me.
As thai enchui^fe, thei shul be losid fro ther place. enchanter (en-chan'ter), n. enchanter, [< ME. A. Copley, tr. of Wits, i'its, and Fancies (ed. 1614).
Wycli/, Job vi. 17 (Oxf.). enchaunter, enchauntour, < OF. enchanteor, en- enchase^t, v. t. [< ME. enehasen, enchacen, < OF.
enchain (en-chan'), v. t. [Formerly also in- chanteur, P. enchanteur Pr. encantaire, = encan- enehacier, enchacer, enchasser, encachier, enca-
chain; < OF. enchainer, F. enchalner = Pr. 8p. tador =
Sp. Pg. encantador =
It. incantatore, <
cier (= Pr. encassar), chase away, < en- cha- +
encadenur =
Pg. encadear =
It. incatenare, < L. incantator, an enchanter, < incantare, charm, cier, chacer, chasser, chase : see eu-i and chase^.]
ML. incatenare, enchain, < L. in, in, + catenare enchant: see enchant.] 1. One who enchants To drive or chase away.
(> OF. chainer, F. chatner, etc.), chain: see en-i or practises enchantment; a sorcerer or ma-
After the comynge of this myghty kynge,
and chain.'] 1 . To chain ; fasten with a chain gician. Om'e olde woo andtroubille to enchace.
bind or hold in or as if in chains hold in bond- ; Flatereres ben the develes enchauntours, for they maken Lydgate. (Halliwell.)
age; enthrall. [Obsolete in the literal use.] a man to wenen himself be lyke that he is not lyke. And ne we ne shull no helpe haue of hym that sholde
Chaucer, Parson's Tale. hem alle enchace oute of this londe, that is the kynge Ar-
In times past the Tynans enchained the images of
. . .
Than Pharo called for the wyse men and enchaunters of thur. Merlin (E. E. T. S.), ii. 182.
their Gods to their shrines, for fear they would abandon Egypte ; and they did in lyke manner with their sorcery.
their city and be gone. Holland, tr. of Plutarch, p. 712. enchase^ (en-chas '),?'. t.; pret. and pp. cHcftased,
Bible (1651), Ex. vii.
What should I do? while here I was etichain'd, ppr. enchasing. [Also inchase, and early mod.
2. One who charms or delights Enchanter's E. enchace, inchace; < F. enchdsser, enchase, <
Ko glimpse of godlike liberty remaln'd. nightshade, a name of the common species of the genus
Dfyden, .lEueid.
Circcea, natural order Onagrace(e, low and slender erect en- +
chdsse, a frame, chase, > E. chase^, q. v.
2. To hold fast; restrain; confine: as, to en- herbs with small white flowers, inhabiting cool, damp Hence by apheresis c/iose3, q. v.] 1. To inlay;
cliain the attention. woods of the northern hemisphere. incrust with precious stones or the like.
The subtUty of nature and operations will not be in- enchanting (en-ch&n'ting), p. a. Charming; Thou Shalt have gloss enough, and all things fit
chained in those bonds. ravishing ; delightful to mind or sense : as, an T' enchase in all show thy long-smothered spirit.
Bacon, Advancement of Learning, ii. 215. enchanting voice ; an enchanting face. Ckaptnan, Bussy d'Ambois, L 1.
It was the Time when silent Night began Simplicity in manners has an enchanting effect.
. . . Then fear the deadly drag, when gems divine
T' enchain with Sleep the busie Spirits of Man. Kames, Elem. of Criticism, iii. Enchase the cup and sparkle in the wine.
Cowley, Davideis, i. Dryden, tr. of Juvenal's Satires, x. 40.
The mountains rise one behind the other, in an enchant-
3. To link together; connect. [Rare.] ing gradation of distances and of melting blues and grays. And precious stones, in studs of gold enchased.
H. James, Jr., Trans. Sketches, p. 242. The shaggy velvet of his buskins graced.
One contracts and enchains his words. Howell. Mickle, tr. of the Lusiad, ii.
enchantingly (en-chan'ting-li), adv. In an en-
enchainment (en-chan'ment),
chainement =
Pr. encadenen Sp. eneadena- =
n. [< F. en- chanting manner; so as to delight or charm. Hence — 2. To inerust or enrich in any manner
Yet never schooled, and yet learned ; full adorn by ornamental additions or by ornamen-
miento =Pg. encadeamento It. incatenamento, = lie's
of noble device
gentle
;
;
encheert (en-cher'), v. t. [< c»-i + cAeeri.] To tous. enclasp, inclasp (en-, in-klasp'), v. t. [< en-1,
enliven ; cheer. enchondroas (en-kon'drus), a. [< Gr. iv, in, in-2, -f clasp.] 1. To fasten with a clasp.
-t- xovdjMc, cartilage.] Cartilaginous. Thamas, 2. To clasp; embrace.
Andin his soveraine throne gan straight dUpoae
Hinuelfe, more full of grace and Majestic,
Med. Diet. The flattering ivy who did ever see
That mote encheare his friends, and foes mote terrifie. Encliopliyllaia (en-ko-fil'um), n. [NL. (Amyot Inclasp the huge trunk of an aged tree ?
Speiiser, F. Q., VII. vL 24. and Serville, 1843), <'Gr. iyx<>C, spear, lance, + F. Beaumont, The Hermaphrodite.
[Gr. eyxciptov, < fv, in, + x^'Pt * hand.] A hand- terous insects of the family ilembracidce, of enclaved, ppr. enclaving. [In mod. use directly
kerchief or napkin hanging from the zone or arched compressed form, with a long, curved, from mod. F. ME. enclaven, < OF. enclaver, F. ;
girdle, formerly worn as one of the vestments hom-Uke process on the back pointing for- enclaver, inclose, lock in, < Pr. enclavar = It.
of the Greek clergy. It is regarded by some as ward. E. cruentatum, so called from its red inchiavare, lock, < ML. inclavare, inclose, < L.
the original form of the present epigonation. markings,._
inhabits tropical America.
.
in + clavis, a key (or clavus, a nail, boltf).]
Enchelia (en-ke'li-a), H. pi. [NL., < Gr. lyx^'/.vc, enchonal (en-ko ri-&\),^a. [< LL. cwcAoriMS (< To inclose or surround, as a region or state, by
an eel.] Ehrenberg's name (1830) of the group Gr. iyxupio^, in or of the country, < h, in, + the territories of another power.
of iiifusorians now called EnchelyidtB. X^pa, country) + -alJ] Belonging to or used enclave (F. pron. on-klav'), n. [D. G. enclave
Enchelycepliali (en-'kel-i-sef'a-U), n.pl. [NL., in a certain country; native; indigenous; de- Dan. enklave = =
Sw. enklav (def 1), < P. en- .
pi. of enciuliicephalus : see ehchelyeephalous.'] motic: specifically applied to -written charac- clave, < enclaver, inclose: see enclave, v.] 1.
A group of apodal teleostean fishes, containing ters: as, an enchorial alphabet. See demotic. Something closed ; specifically, a small outly-
the true eels and congers, as distinguished from The demotic or enchorial writing is merely a form of ing portion of a country which is entirely sur-
hieratic used for the vulgar dialect, and employed for rounded by the territories of another power.
the mursenoids, etc., which form the group Colo-
legal docnmenta from the time of Dyn. XXVI. downwards.
oephali. The technical characters are the absence of a Eneyc. Brit, VII. 721. Enclaves are especially common among the
pr«coracoid arch and symplectic bone, in connection with states of the German empire.
t developed preoperculum and opercular bones. In Cope's enchoric (en-kor'ik), a. Same as encftoriaZ.
Monaco is to be as it was before 1792, and Avignon, the
Stem the group la an order of phyaortoinoua llahes ; in enchoilstic (en-ko-ris'tik), a. [As enchor-ial
Venaissin, Montbelliard, and all other enclaven within
a suborder of .^podM
ill's,
+-istic.'\ Belonging to a given region; na- these limits are to be French territory.
,, , > r,
enchelyceplialona (en'kel-i-sef a-los), a. [< ^:^ indigenous, or autochthonous. Woolsey, Introd. to Inter. Law, App. ii., p. 410.
NL. enchelycephalus, < Gr. e)';teXt>f, an eel, + enchylenui (en-ki-le'mfi), n. [NL., < Gr. iv, in, In the centre of the Galla country are small enclaves,
KE^JI, head.] Pertainmg to or havmg the + 'y^^ .^^^. ^^^ ^^^j^^ { The fluid and like HarAr. R. N. CusI, Mod. Langs, of Africa, p. 125.
ebaneten ot the Enchelycephalt. unorganized part of vegetable protoplasm.— 2. In her., anything let into something else,
of,
, .
clog or encumber. tory eulogistic as, an encomiastic address or cision, a hindrance, < cyKdirreiv, make incisions,
; :
Teiiipesta themselves, high seas, and howling winds, discourse. hinder, < h, in, -I-
The gutter 'd ix>c)cs, and congregated sands,
Traitors ensteep'd to endog the guiltless lieel.
To frame some encomiastic speech upon this our me- Kdnreiv, cut.] A
tropolis. B. Jomon, Cynthia's Revels, i. 1. genus of irregular
Shak., Othello, ii. 1.
Botli [epitaphs] are encomiastic, and describe the cliar- clypeastroid sea-
encloister (en-klois't^r), F. t. [Formerly also acter and work of the deceased with considerable fullness
incloister; < OF. "encloistrer, enclostrer (cf. en- urchins, of the fam-
and beauty of expression. Encyc. Brit,, VIII. 495.
ily Mellitidce. It Is
doistre, enclostre, n., an inelosure, cloister) (F.
Il.t ". An encomium. notable for the massive-
encMtrer = Pi. cnclostrar=Sp. Pg. eitclatistrar ness of the calcareous
thank you. Master Compass, for your short Encomias-
= It. iiiclaustrare), < en-, in, + cloistrer, inclose, tic.
I
B. Jonaon, Magnetick Lady, i. 1. test, and lias a large lu-
< eloistre, an inelosure, cloister: see cloister.'] nule between the poste-
To confine in a cloister; cloister; immvire. encomiastical (en-ko-mi-as'ti-kal), a. Same rior ambtllacra, in addi-
as encoDiia.itic. tion to five incisions op-
Those that sprung posite the ambulacra,
From Ponda, that great king of Mercia holy Tweed, ;
encomiastically (en-ko-mi-as'ti-kal-i), adv. In as in E. cmarginata.
And Kinisdred, with these their sisters, Kinisweed, an encomiastic manner. The mass of the test is
And Eadburg, last, not least, at Oodmanchester all have not spoken of your majesty encomiaetically,
If I greatest in E. grandis,
Endouter'd. Drayton, Polyolbion, xxlx. your majesty will be pleased only to ascribe it to the law a species of the west Encope emarginata.
of an history. Baeoti, To the King, letter 84. coast of Mexico.
enclose, encloser, etc. See inclose, etc.
enclothe (en-klofH'), pret. and pp. encomiologic (en-ko-mi-o-loj'ik),
en COQUille (on ko-kely')- [F. : en, in; co-
v. t.\ en- a. [< LL. en-
shell, cockle: see cockle^.]
clothed, ppr. enelothing. [< e»-l + clother\ To comiologicus, < Gr. 'eynufiio^MyiKdi (as a noun in
qiiille,
making,
In dress-
etc., arranged in the shape of a scallop-
clothe. Westminster Bev. neut., eyKU/iioXoyiKov, sc. iihpov), < cyKtjfuov, a
shell ; scalloped ; imbricated : said of knots or
enclond (en-kloud'), t>. (. [< e»-l + cloudi^, t'.] laudatory ode, -I- -?Myiii6(, < -?Myla, < Tieyeiv,
rosettes of ribbons, trimmings, and the like.
To cover with clouds; becloud; shade. speak : see -ology.] In anc. pros., noting a com-
The heavens on everie side enclowded bee, pound or episyiithetic verse, consisting of a dac- encore (on-kor'), adv. [F., < OF. encore Pr. =
Spenser, tr. of Virgil s Gnat, 1. 671. tylicpenthemim (-^ w w -c w v^ ^) followed
encara, enqucra =
OSp. encara =
It. ancora,
|
again, once more, < L. (in) hanc horam, lit. (to)
|
enclowt, encloyt, v. See accloy. commonly called the elegiambus. more : used in calling for a repetition of a par-
encoach (en-kooh'), v. t. [< e»-i + coach.'] To encomiont (en-ko'mi-on), n. Same as encomium. ticular part in a theatrical or musical perform-
carry in a coach. [Rare.] encomium (en-ko'mi-um), n. [Formerly also ance. This use is unknown to the French, who employ
Like Phaeton . . eticoached in burnished gold.
eiicomion (and encomy, q. v.); F. Sp. Pg. It. = the word 6m (twice, a second time) for the same purpose.
.
couleurer, color.] To color or invest with color. incompass; < en-^ -{- compass.] 1. To form a encoubert (en-ko'bert), n. [Appar. a F. form
Mrs. Browning. circle about encircle. ;
of Sp. encubierto =
Pg. encoberto, pp. of Sp. Pg.
encobrir, Sp. also encubrir, cover, conceal, < en-
encolpion, encolpium (en-kol'pi-on, -um), ». Look, how my ring eneompassetk thy finger.
pi. encolpia (-a). [LGr. cyaahnov, prop. neut. of Shak., Rich. III., i. 2.
+ Sp. cobrir, cubrir =
Pg. cobrir, cover: see
cyK6\Tno^,on tte bosom, < £i',in, -I- /cd/lffof, bosom, 2. To environ; inclose; surround; shut in: as,
cover'^.] A typical armadillo of the family Da-
lap.] 1. In the early and medieval church, a and subfamily Dasypodinw (which sypodidee
the besieging army encompassed Jerusalem.
small reliquary or a casket containing a minia- such as the peludo, Dasypus villosus. Thesee),
With the great glorie of that wondrous light term has had a more extensive application.
ture copy of the Gospels, worn hanging in front His throne is all encompassed around.
of the breast an amulet : often in the shape of
; Spenser, Heavenly Beautie.
See cut under armadillo.
a cross. Hence —
2. In the medieval church Canutus before the Death of K. Ethelred had besieged
en COUChure (on ko-shiir'). [F. : en, in; cou-
chure, < coucher, lie down, couch see coueh^.]
and in the present Greek Church, a bishop's the City, and now with a large Trench encompassed it. :
and shoulders, OF. encolure, encoleure, a neck influences of awe, tenderness, and sympathy which no sewed in rows one beside another.
words can adequately express, no theories thoroughly ex- encounter (en-koun'ter), V. [Formerly also in-
of land, an isthmus (cf. encoler, put on the plain. G. H. Lewes, Probs. of Life and Mind, 223.
neck, embrace), < en (< L. in), in, on, -f col, <
I. i. §
counter; < ME. encountren, < OF. encontrer, en-
L. coHuHi, the neck : see collar.] 1. The neck
3. To go or sail round : as, Drake encompassed cuntrer =
Pt. Sp. Pg. encontrar =
It incontrare,
and shoulders, as of a horse. the globe. —
4t. To get into one's toils; get meet, come against, < L. in, in, to, + contra,
round ; gain power over. against see counter'^, counter^, and cf rencoun-
Hair in heaps lay heavily : .
Over a pale brow spirit-pure. Ah ha Mistress Ford and Mistress Page, have I en-
! ! ter, v.] I. trans. \. To come upon or against;
Carved like the heart of the coal-black tree, compassed you? Shak., M. W. of W., ii. 2. meet with especially, to meet casually, unex-
;
Crisped like a war-steed's encolure. To compass
5. or bring about ; accomplish. pectedly, reluctantly, or the like.
Browning, Statue and Bust.
[Rare.] If I must die,
2. The opening at the neck of a dress, and also Whatever the method employed for encompassiTig his I will encounter darkness as a bride.
that at the armhole to receive the top of the death, or wherever he may be found, the tiger proves him- Shak., M. for M., ilL 1.
sleeve. Diet, of Needlework. self a splendid beast. When we came near any of these [Tonquin] Villages, we
encombert, ". t. An obsolete form of encumber. P. Robinson, Under the Sun, p. 201. were commonly encountered with Beggars.
encombermentt, n. See encumberment. =S3m. 2. To gird, invest, hem in, shut up. Dampier, Voyages, II. i. 14.
iyKufuaaTT)^, < cyiuj/iiaieiv, praise, < eyK^uiov, an ing, or the state of being encompassed. 2. Cir- — him also to triumph over both.
J. K. Seeley, Nat. Religion, p. 97.
ode of praise, eulogy see encomium.] One who cumlocution in speaking periphrasis. [Rare.]
: ;
That they do know my son, come you more nearer tack upon.
The Jeaaits [are] the great ejicomiasts of the Chi-
. . . Than your particular demands will touch it.
neaes. Locke, Human Understanding, i. 4, There are miseas biggeasourcountrey dogs, and there-
Shak., Hamlet, ii. 1.
fore they are hunted with dogs, because cats are not able
In his writings he appears a servile e-namtiast.
Goldvmith, Voltaire.
encomyt, n. [< L. encomium: see encomium.] to incounter them. Hakluyt's Voyages, II. 55.
Same as encomium. And as we find our passions do rebel.
encomiastic (en-ko-mi-as'tik), a. and re. [= Sp.
Many popish parasites and menideasing flatterers have Encounter them with reason.
encomidstico =
Pg. It. encomiastieo, < Gr. ey- written large commendations and encomies of those. B. Jonson, Volpoue, ill 2.
tu/uaaTM6{, < eyno/udietv, praise see encomiast.] ; Bp. Bate, Select Works, p. 7. 3t. To oppose ; oppugn.
! : ;
come to- coragier, encourager, encourage: see encourage encrinal (en'kri-nal), o. [< encrin(ite) -al.] +
2. To meet in opposition or conflict ;
and -ment.'] 1. The act of encouraging, or of Pertaining to an eiiicrinite or encrinites relat- ;
[Formerly also Somewhile with merry purpose, fit to please, encrinic (en-krin'ik), a. [< encrin(ite) + -ic]
encounter (en-koun'tfer), n. And otherwhile with good encouragement. Same as encrinal.
incounter; < ME. encontre (rare), < OF. encontre, Spen^r, F. Q., VI v. 32.
Encrinida (en-krin'i-de), n. pi. [Nl.., < Eneri-
F. encontre =
Pr. encontre Sp. encuentro := = For when he dies, farewell all honour, bounty. nus + -idm.'] The former name of a family
Pg. encontro =
It. incontro, a meeting; from All generous encouragement of arts. Otway, Orphan. of crinoids which contained the permanently
the verb. Cf. rencounter, n.l 1. meeting, A As a general rule. Providence seldom vouchsafes to mor- stalked forms, rooted during life. Nearly all the
particularly a sudden or accidental meeting, of tals any more than just that degree of encouragement fossilforms, the stone-lilies or encrinites, are of this char-
two or more persons or bodies of any kind ; a which suffices to keep them at a reasonably full exertion acter. But the family was also represented by several liv-
of their powers. Hawthorne, Seven Gables, iii. ing genera, or sea-lilies, as distinguished from the free
coming together or in contact. feather-stars. It is now divided into numerous families.
To shun th' encounter of the vulgar crowd. Pope. 2. That which serves to excite courage or con- As now used by some authors, the family is restricted to
an encouraging fact or circumstance; fistulatous crinoids with a dicyclic base, basal plates with
Specifically —
2. In physics, the coming within
fidence ;
an incentive or inducement ; that which serves well-developed axial canal, brachials of two pieces, and
the sphere of one another's action of the rapidly to promote or advance.
generally without
anal plates. They
moving molecules of a gaseous body. The word Fig. I.
lived chiefly in
is so used by some writers in order to avoid
eoUition, What encouragement Is there to venture an acquaintance
the Triassic seas.
which might be understood to imply impact The mole- with the rash and unstable!
See Crinoidea.
cnlM of gases move in nearly rectilinear paths, until they Bp. Atterbury, Sermons, II. xxUi.
come so close to one another that they are suddenly de- encrinital
To think of his paternal care
flected. This very brief mutual action is the encounter. Is a most sweet encouragement to prayer. (en'kri-ni-tal),
See^iu. BvTom, On the Lord's Prayer. a. [< encrinite
When the distance between any two molecules U so ._„„„___„
enCOUrager ,^„ v,,-'s4 a-\ n,
(en-ktU-^J-er), „ One who encou- + -al.'\ Same
maU that they are capable of exerting sensible forces ^ as encrinal.
or stimulates to action ; one who
-"'
-- -incites, '"
upon one another, there will be said to be an encounter rages,
encrinite (en'-
between thenu promotes or advances.
//. W. Watton, Kinetic Theory of Oases, p. 27. kri-nit),». [=
He IPlato] would have women follow the camp, to be F. encrinite, <
8. A meeting in opposition or conflict of any spectators and encouragerg of noble actions.
Burton, Anat. of MeL, p. 529.
Eocrlnite : head and piece of stem c
NL. encrinites,
kind; a conflict; a battle; specifically, a con- left.
< Gr. ec, in, -^
test between individuals or a gmaU number of a, a, parts of the stem i, b, separate joints.
The pupe a qiastw of polite learning, and a great en-
is
;
Kpivov, a iiljr
men, or an accidental meeting and fighting of
detachments.
courager of art*. Addieon.
Full jolly knight he seemd, and faire did sitt. late king (of Saxony), who was the greatest encourager of
As oDe for knightly giusts and fierce encounters fltt arts and sciences, and of every thing that is curious. to the ordinarv stalked form with a cylindrical
Spenser, F. Q.. L t- 1- Pocoeke, Description of the East, II. iL 235. stem and well-formed arms. Encrinites compose
vast strata of marble in
Leave this keen enanmter of our wits. encouragingly (en-kur'aj-ing-li), adv. In a and Fig. a.
northern Europe
Shak., Elch. HI., i. 2. maimer to give courage or hope of success. North America. In flg. 2
Who ever knew Truth put to the worse in a free and eucradle (en-kra'dl), v. t. pret. and pp. en- ;
the variety in the figures
open encounter! Milton, Areopagitica, p. 52. cradled, ppr. encrodling, [< en-1 + cradle.'] of the encrinites is caused
by the different sections
4. Manner of enc<>mitering ; mode of accost or To lay in a cradle. represented. See Crinoi-
address ; behavior in intercourse. Beginne from first, where he eneradled was dea. [The words associated
In simple cratch, wrapt in a wad of hay. with encrinite are now ar-
Thus has he onlygotthe tune of the time, and out-
. . .
Spenter, Hymn of Heavenly Love. chaic In zodlogy. In com-
ward lubit of encounter. Shak., Hamlet, r. 2. position encrinite (NL.
• Byn. 8. Encounter, Rencounter, Skirmith, Bruek, col-
encratic (en-krat'ik), a. [< Or. iyicpar^, having encrinitei) is generally
lision, affair. As conflicts in war these are shorter, with power, possession, or control, sell-controlling, < represented by its radical
cv, in, + itparof power, strength, < Kparix, strong,
fewer engaged, and of less im|K)rt«nce, than those com- element (Gr. Kpii/ov), giv-
An
,
ing two parallel series of
pared under battle. etteounter is often an accidental
meeting, resulting in some conflict, hut not suffered to
hard, = E. hard.]
Of or pertaining to self-con- generic words ending in
grow into a general engagement. Rencounter is the same trol and forms of
self-denial, especially in the -cn'nt« and -criniteg.]
ing Encrinites.
thing, expresiwd by • term leas common. A lUrmith is an continence and fasting or abstinence from ani- Encrinites (en-kri-
irregular
- , , contest between parts
or deaoltory . of armies, as mal food. ni'tez),M. [NL.] The prior form of -EMcriniw.
fT »'S!'"^21 EncratiBni(en'kra-tizm),n. l<encrat.ic + -ism.] encrinitic,encrinitical(en-kri-nit'ik, -i-kal),a.
in batUe. A fcrusik taSli'',IS'^h^*^3;if~
rtMrt and sharp.. peHup. niSirinf
> engaging
"^^^ principles of the Encratites especially, [< encrinite + -ic, -ieal.] Same as encHnal. ;
the whole of some force for a time, but not being pushed
into a long or hanl-fought struggle. See etrife. the doctrine that the union of the sexes is es- Encrinoidea (en-kri-noi'de-fi,), n. pi. [NL.] A
encounterer (eii-koun't6r-.*r), n. 1. One who sentiallv evil. group of crinoids. See Crinoidea.
eucouuters; an opponent; an antagonist. 2. Encratite (en'kra-tit), n. — [< LL. EncraUtm, < Encrinuridae (en-kri-nii'ri-de), n. pi. [NL., <
One who goes to an encounter, or seeks encoun- Gr. iyKparirat, pi. of tyKpaxirnK, lit. the self-dis- Encrinurua + -id<B.] family of Silurian tri- A
ters; one who is ready for encounter of any ciplined, continent, < iynpaTrK, self-Kiisciplined, lobites.
kind. , continent, being master, being in possession EncrinurUS (en-kri-nii'rus), n. [NL., < Gr. ev,
O, these encounteren, so glib of tongue. of power, < h, in, + xparof, power, strength.] in, -I- Kf4vov, lily (see encrinite), + ovpd, tail.]
That Kl"e a coasting welcome ere it comes, In the early history of the church, especially The typical genus of the family Encrinuridw.
Anil wide unchup tne table of their thonghts among the Gnostics, one of those ascetics who Ejicrinus (en'kri-nus), n. [NL. (Lamarck,
To every tickling reader Shak., T. and C, iv. 6.
refrained from marriage and from the use of 1816), < Gr. h, in, + Kpivov, lily: see encrinite.]
!
encourage (en-knr'*j), r. *. pret. and pp. en- flesh-meat and wine. They were members of various The name-giving genus of crinoids of the fam-
;
coiirnt)'^. ppr. encouraging. [Formerly also in- heretical sects, although sometimes siwken of as a dis- ily Enerinidce, formerly of wide extent, but
courdge; < OP. eneouramer, encoraigier, encou- tinct body founded by the apologist Tatian, of the second now restricted to a few closely related species.
rager, F. encourager {=s Pr. eneorajar =
Sp. Pg. century- They were aUo called C<mfin«nt».
Also Encrinites.
encorajar = It. incoraggiare, incoraggire), < en, It was the heresy of the Gnostics, that It was no matter „_,_i„_.j /„„ v^or>t''\ n ATR enm^ea,^
T< Ji^. pntmsned-
how men lived, so they did but believe aright: which encrisped (en-knspt ),
a.
in, + courage, courage, heart: see courage, n.
l<.
wicked doctrine Ttttlanns, a learned ChrUtlan, did so de- pp. of *C«criJ*», tl., < en-^ -T cmp.J CUTiea,
and V. Cf. ML. incordari, encourage, inspire, test, that he fell into a quite contrary, and thence formed in curls. [Bare.]
< L. in, in, +
cor(d-) E. heart.] 1. To give = came the sect Eneratitet.
Thai shall have softo encrieped wolle [wool]
courage to; inspire with couraj;e, spirit, or Jer. Taylor, Works (ed. 1888), n. 812.
And wonderly prolonged atte the fuUe.
firmness of mina; incite to action or perse- encraty (en'kra-ti),n. [< Gr. fyitpdrftti, mastery, Palladiut, Husbondrie (E. B. T. S.), p. 154.
verance ontrol, self-control, < cyKpaHj^, having power, With herU (hairs] encrisped, yalowo as the golde.•
But charge Joshua, and encourai7< him. Dent ilL 28. possession, or control: see encratic] Mastery
" Iton
Skelton,
"
Garland
' •
of Laurel,
• • L 289.
KUig Richard, to encourage his Soldien, made a solemn over the senses; abstinence from pleasures of ^--a-i. fen-kroch'l
(eiLKrocn ;, v.
v in- [Formerly also
encroacn
Speech to them. Baker, Chronicles, p. 23:<. sense; self-control, as exercised in fasting and croach ; < ME. encrochen, < OF. encrochier, en-
The actors liehind the scene, who ascribed this pause continence, especially the latter.
to ills natural timidity, attempted tu encourage him.
crocher, encrocier, encroquier, encroequier (ML.
OoUUmith, Vicar, xix. The martyrs at Lyons, as we have seen, and it may be incrocare), seize upon, take, < en, in, eroe, a +
said the .School of .S. John In general, were distinguished
To help forward promote; give support to hook : see crook, and cf. accroach.] I.t trans.
2. by a nolile moiieration by encraty, or temperance, in the
:
truest sense of the word. Mohan, Church Uistory, p. 101. To seize; take; take possession of; get; obtain.
;:
: ;: :
ince, domain, or limits of some other person encumbrcr (= Pr. eticombrar = It. ingombrare), Gou'er, Conf. Amant., I.
or tiling ; infringe upon or restrict another's < en- -t- combrer, cumber see en-l and cumber.] ency., encyc. Abbreviations of encyclopedia.
:
right in any way ; specifically, in law, to extend 1. To clog or impede with a load, burden, or encyclic, encyclical (en-sik'lik, -li-kal), a. and
one's possession of land so as to transgress the other hindrance; render difficult or laborious n. [= F. cnoyclique = Sp. enciclico = Pg. en-
boundary between it and the rightful posses- in motion or operation embarrass overload ; cyclico = It. enciclico, < NL. encyclicus (after L.
;
sion or enjoyment of another or of the public perplex; obstruct. cyclicus : see cyclic), equiv. to L. encycUos, < Gr.
with on or upon before the object. Into the bestes throte he shal hem caste. ijKVK?.toc, rounded, circular, periodic, general, <
Exclude the encroaching cattle from thy ground.
To sleke hys hunger, and encmnbre hys teth. £v, in, + KVK?.oc, a circle.] I. a. 1. Circular;
Chaucer, Good Women, I. 2006. sent to all members of some circle or class.
Dryden.
Those who are gentle and uncomplaining, too candid
Bncomhre neuere thy conscience for couetyse of Mede In the early church letters sent by members of a council
[gain]. Piers Plowman (C), iii. 51. to all the churches, or by bishops to churches of a particu-
to intrigue, too delicate to encroach, suffer much. lar diocese,were called enct/ctic letters. The term is now
Marg. Fuller, Woman in 19th Cent., p. 61. Though laden, not encumber'd with her spoil.
by the Roman Catholic Church exclusively applied to let-
Cowper, Tirocinium, I. 17.
Among primitive men, individual conflicts for food pass ters on topics of interest to the whole church, addressed
into conflicts between hordes, when, in pursuit of food, Knowledge, . . . by the Pope to all the bishops in communion with him.
one encnaches on another's territory. Tillsmooth'd, and squar'd, and fitted to itis place.
U. Spencer, Prin. of Sociol., § 448. Does but encumber whom it seems f enrich. An imperial encyclic letter branded with an anathema
Cowper, Task, vi. 95.
the whole proceedings at Chalcedon, and the letter of Pope
2. Figuratively, to intrude gradually ; lay hold, Leo, as tainted with Nestoriaiusm.
as if by stealth or irresistible power: with on
Specifically —
2. To place (property) under a Milman, Latin Christianity, iii. 1.
or upon before the object: as, old age is en- charge or servitude load with debt or liability
;
The Encyclic Epistle commences with the duty of pre-
as, to encumber an estate with mortgages, or serving the faith pure and undefiled as it was at first.
croaching upon me.
with a widow's dower an encumbered title. See
;
J. M. Neale, Eastern Church, i. 1194.
Superstition, ... a creeping and encroachirw evil.
Hooker, Eccles. Polity. encumbrance, 3. =Syii. 1. To oppress, overload, hinder, 2. In bot., isomerous, with regular alternation
entangle, handicap, weigh down. of parts: applied to flowers in which the pet-
And listened long to the sweet sounds that thrilled
The frosty air, till now the encroaching cold encumbert, ». [< ME. encomber, < OF. encom- als, stamens, etc., are equal in number in each
Recalled her to herself. bre, <e>ico)«6rer, v., encumber: a6& encumber, v.] whorl, alternating with each other.
Bryant, Little People of the Snow. An encumbrance ; a hindrance. If all the whorls have an equal number of parts and are
=Syil. Trench upon, infringe upon, etc. (see trespass, v. i.); Thei spedde her iourneyes that tliei com to the Caatell alternate, it [a flower] is encyclic. Encyc. Brit., IV. 127.
to invade, violate, creep upon. of Charroye with-oute eny encomber, and ther thei made
encroacnt (en-kroch'), «. [< encroach, d.] The of the kynge Bohors grete ioye. II. n. A circular letter.
act of encroaching ; encroachment. Merlin (E. E. T. S.), ii. 358. He [Leo XIII.] teaches by encyclicals ; his predecessor
taught by allocutions. The Century, XXXVI. 90.
I cannot imagine that hereticks who errf undamentally, encumberingly, incumberingly (en-, in-kum'-
and by consequence damnably, took the first rise, and be- ber-ing-li), adv. In a manner to encumber or encyclopedia, encyclopaedia (en-si-klo-pe'di-
gan to set up with a fundamental error, but grew into it impede. a), n, [Formerly also encyclopedy, encyclopedic,
by insensible encroaches and gradual insinuations. =
South, Works, IV. ix. encumbermentt, n. [= F. encombrement = Pr. encyclopwdy, < F. encyclopedic Sp. enciclopedia
One who
encombrament = It.ingombramento ; as encum- = Pg. encyclopedia =
It. enciclopedia, < NL. en-
encroacher (en-kr6'ch6r), w. en-
ber +-ment.] The act of encumbering; ob- cyclopcedia, < Gr. cyKVKTiovaiSda (a rare and bar-
croaches ; one who lessens or limits anything, barous form found in L. authors), prop. cyKVK'ktoQ
struction ; interference.
as a right or privilege, by narrowing its boun- TTaidcia, the circle of arts and sciences, the gen-
Into the se of Spayn [they] wer dryuen in a torment
daries.
Among the Sarazins, bot God, that grace thani lent, eral education preceding professional studies
Sir John Mason, Treasurer of the Queen's Chamber, a Saued tham alle tho tymes fro ther encuniberment. iynvKMoQ, in a circle, circular, periodic, gener-
grave and Learued Man, but a great Usurper and En- Bob. of Brunne, tr. of Langtoft's Chron., p. 148.
croacher upon Ecclesiastical Livings. al (see encyclic) ; naidtia, education, < Traidevetv,
The best advizement was, of bad, to let her
educate, bring up a child, < Tralg (tzmd-), child:
Baker, Chronicles, p. 337. Sleepe out her fill without encomberment.
The bold encroachers on the deep Spenser, F. Q., VI. viii. 38.
see pedagogue.] 1. The circle of sciences; a
Gain by degrees huge tracts of land. general system of instruction in several or aU
Swift, Run upon the Bankers, 1720. encumbrance, incumbrance (en-, in-kum'-
brans), n. [<ME. encombrance, encombraunce, departments of knowledge.
encroachingly (en-kro'ching-li), adv. By en-
< Of. encombrance,
< encombrer, encumber: see And therefore, in this encyclopedic and round of know-
croachment. encumber.] 1. The act of encumbering, or the
ledge like the great and exemplary wheels of heaven, we
encroachment (en-kroch 'ment), n. [< OF. must observe two circles.
state of being encumbered. Sir T. Browne, Vulg. Err., To the Reader.
(AF.) encrochment, < encrochi'er, encroach: see
Ther-fore, wyte ye well that this is the encombraunce of Some by this art have become universally learned in a
encroach &nd -ment.'] 1. The act of encroach- the deuell. Merlin (E. E. T. S.), i. 6. far largercompass than the old reputed encyclopedy.
ing or intruding or trespassing an entering on ;
Boyle, Works, VI. 335.
2. That which encumbers, burdens, or clogs
the rights or possessions of another, and tak- To Systematic Theology belongs also formal Encyclo-
anything that impedes action, or renders it dif-
ing possession ; unlawful intrusion in general pcedia, or an exhibition of theology as an organic whole,
ficjilt and laborious an obstruction or impedi-
;
assumption of the rights and privileges of an- showing the relationship of the different parts, and their
other.
ment an embarrassment.
; proper function and aim.
Let none thinke they incountred not with all manner of Schaff, Christ and Christianity, p. 6.
It is the surest policy in princes
To govern well their own than seek encroach-ment
Upon anothers right. Ford, Perkin Warbeck, iii. 4.
incumbrances. Capt. John Smith, True lYavels, II. 214.
Strip from the branching Alps their piny load.
Specifically 2. — A
work in which the various
topics included under several or all branches
The huge encumbrance of horrific wood. Thomson.
But ambitious encroachments of the federal government of knowledge are treated separately, and usu-
on the authority of the state governments would not ex-
cite the opposition of a single state, or of a few states
Specifically —
3. In law, a charge or servitude ally in alphabetical order.
affecting property, which diminishes the value
only. Madison, The Federalist, Ho. xlvi. It [a public library] should be rich in books of refer-
of ownersnip, or may impair its enjoyment, so ence, in encyclopoedias, where one may learn without cost
It will be seen that the system which effectually secured
as to constitute a qualification or diminution of of research what things are generally known. For it is
our liberties against the eiicroachments of kingly power
the rights of ownership. It does not impair owner- far more useful to know these than to know those that are
gave birth to a new class of abuses from which absolute
monarchies are exempt. Macaulay, Hist. Eng., i. ship or power to convey, but implies a burden which will not generally known. Lowell, Books and Libraries.
continue on the property in the hands of the purchaser.
2. The thing taken by encroaching. 3. In a narrower sense, a cyclopedia. See cy-
If a person owns only an undivided share in land, the
share of his cotenant is not designated an encumbrance clopedia, 1.
The general rule is that if the wrongful act is acquiesced
in, the encroachment (i. e., the land added) is considered on his share but if the land is subject to unpaid taxes or
; Abbreviated enc, ency., encyc.
as annexed to the original holding. to a right of way, or if the land or one's share is subject French Encyclopedia (Encyclopedic on Dictionnaire rai-
Rapelje and Latvrence. to a mortgage or a mechanic's lien, it is said to be en- sonne des sciences, etc.), a celebrated I'rench work in 28
cumbered. folio volumes (including 11 volumes of plates), the first
3. Figuratively, the act of intruding gradually
and as if by stealth; approach, seizure, or pro-
4. Afamily charge or care ; especially, a child of whicii appeared in 1751 and the last in 1765. Five vol-
or a family of children : as, a widow without en- umes of supplements were issued in 1776-7, and two vol-
gress : as, the encroachments of disease. umes of index in 1780, the complete work thus consisting
cumbrance or encumbrances. [CoUoq.]— Cove- of 35 volumes folio. The chief editor was Diderot, who
encrownt, "• t. [ME. encrownen, < OF. encoro- nant against encumbrances, a covenant, sometimes was assisted by D'Alembert, and many of the great con-
ner, < e«- -I- coroner, coronner, couronner, crown inserted in conveyances of land, that there are no en- temporary literary men of France (hence called the ency-
see e»-l and crown.] To crown. cumbrances except such as may be specified. Mesne — clopedists) contributed to it. FYom the skeptical charac-
This lawe of amiys was founded on the IX order of
encumbrances. See tnesne. = Sya. 2. Burden, check, ter of many of the articles, the work excited the bitterest
hindrance, drag, weight, dead weight. ecclesiastical enmity, and had no small part in bringing
angellys in heven encrownyd vith precyous stonys of colour
encumbrancer, incumbrancer (en-, in-kum'-
and of vertues dyvers. Also of theym are fyguryed the about the state of public opinion which prepared the way
colours in armys. bran-ser), n. One who holds an encumbrance for the French revolution.
or a legal claim on an estate.
Quoted in Booke of Precedeiux(E. E. T. S., extra ser.), i. 103. encyclopediacal (en-si''klo-pe-di'a-kal), a.
encrownmentf. n. [ME. encorownment, < OF. encumbroust, a. [ME. encombrous, encomber- Same as encyclopedic. [Rare.]
encoronement, < encoroner, crown: see encrown ous, < OF. encombros, cncombrotis, encombrus, < encyclopedian (en-si-klo-pe'di-an), a. and n.
and -ment.] Coronation. enco»!ftre,n., encumber: soe encumber, n.] Cum- I. a. Same as encyclopedic. [Bare.]
Kepede fore encoromnmentcs of kynges enoynttede. brous; tedious; embarrassing; burdensome. H.t n. The circle of sciences or knowledge ;
Mrrrte Arthure (E. E. T. S.), I. 4196. Ful encomberouse is the usynge. the round of learning.
Chaucer, Complaint of Venus, \. 42. Let them have that encyclopadian, all the learning in
encrust, encrustation, etc. See incrust, etc.
What helpp shall he the world, they must keep it to themselves.
encrystalt (en-kris'tal), v. t. [Formerly also Whos sieves encomhrous so syde trayle Burton, Anat. of Mel., p. 191.
enchristal; < en-1 +" crystal.] To inclose in Do to his lorde ?
crystal ; surround with or bury in ice. Booke of Precedence (E. E. T. S., extra ser.), i. 107.
encyclopedic, encyclopaedic (en-si-klo-pe'dik
We hear of some enchristal'd, such as have To avoid many encuinbrous arguments, which wit can
or -ped ik), a. [= F. encyclopedique i^ Sp. en-
That, which produc'd their death, become their grave. devise against the truth, I send to your grace the copy of ciclopedico = Pg. encyclopedico = It. enciclopc-
Cartwright, On the Great Frost mine answer. Strype, Cranmer, ii. 3, note. dico, mh. eticyclo2)aidia : see encyclopedia.] 1,
— ; ; ! :
We still used, with our multifarious strivings, an ency- with a comparatively tough resisting layer, which thus the first in intention, and last in execution.
clopedic training, a wide command over the resources of forms a cyst. The process is usually preliminary to re- Dryden, Essay on Dram. Poesy.
OOP native tongue. G. P. Marsh, Lects. on Eng. Lang. i. , production, one of the consequences of encystment being Art is the spirit's volimtary use and combination of
the formation within of spore-masses or plastidules, which things to serve its end. Emerson, Art.
2. Possessing wide and varied information at length escape on rupture of the cyst, and take up an
specifically, possessing an extensive but frag-
A life that moves to gracious ends
independent existence. In infusorians three kinds of en- Thro' troops of unrecording friends.
mentary knowledge of facts rather than a com- cystment are distinguished, technically called protective, Tennyson, To .
duplicative, and sporular. (6) A similar process occuiTing
prehensive uiulerstaniiing of principles. 8. A
necessary termination or consequence;
in certain fresh-water algte, especially desmids. (c) The
encyclopedical, encyclopaedical (en-si-klo- hydatid or encysted stage of fliikes and tapeworms, as an an inevitable issue or conclusion ; especially,
pe di-kal or -ped'i-kal), a. Same as oneyclope- ecMnococcus. See cut under Tcenia. (d) The similar in logic, a result toward which the action of
die. encysted states of sundry other animals, or their ova, em-
bryos, or larvae.
anything tends, in such a manner that if its at-
Klein's gigantic work [" History of the Drama "J, in its tainment in one way is prevented some other
Inception reminding one of the encyclopedical works of end (end), n. [Early mod. E. also ende (E. dial,
N. A. Rev., CXXVII. 187. also eend) < ME. ende, eende, < AS. ende OS. = action tending to the same result will be set up,
the middle ages. ;
endi =OFries. enda, einde, eind, ein MD. ende, = or so that there is some tendency to such sub-
Aristotle was not only one of the most inqoiring and
eneyeU>p(Kiical, but also one of the most thoroughly sensi- cinde, D. eind, einde =
MLG. LG. ende OHG. = stitution of one means for another.
ble, of all writers. Eticyc. Brit., II. 516. anti, andi, enti, ente, ende, MHG. ente, ende, G. The end of those things is death. Rom. vi. 21.
encyclopedism, encyclopaedism (en-si-klo- ende =Icel. endir, m., endi, neut., Sw. dnde, = Whose ende is good or evill, the same thing is good or
A
pe dizm), n. l<. encyclopedia + -iism.'] 1. That = =
dnda Dan. ende Goth, andeis (with orig. suf- evill.
to defende himself.
sweard is good, because it is good for a raanne
Sir T. Wilson, Rule of Reason.
method of collecting and stating information fix "-yc) =Skt. anta, end, limit, border, vicinity.
There's a divinity that shapes our ends.
which is characteristic of an encyclopedia. From an orig. case-form of this noun were prob. Rough-hew them how we will.
2. That phase of religious skepticism in the developed the prepositions and prefixes in- Shak., Hamlet, v. 2.
eighteenth century of which the French Ency- cluded under and- C>an-^,a-^), ante-, anti-: see 9. In archery, the of arrows shot from number
clopedia was the exponent. See encyclopedia. these.] 1 One of the terminal points or parts
.
one end of the range, before proceeding to
of that which has length, or more length than shoot from the other.
From the divine Founder of Christianity to the withered
Pontid of Encyclopedism, in all times and places, the breadth the part which lies at one of the ex-
;
By the rules of the York Round three arrows to each
Hero haa been worshipped. tremities of a line, or of whatever has longi- archer constitute an end.
Carlyle, Heroes and Hero- Worship, f. tudinal extension : as, the end of a house or of M. aTid W. Thompson, Archery, p. 52.
encyclopedist, encyclopaedist (en-si-klo-pe'- a table; the end of the street; each end of a An end. See art-«?>d.— At loose ends, in disorder;
dist), «. [= ¥. encyclopediste = 8p. encicVape- chain or rope. slack; undisciplined.
dista = Pg. encyclopedista = It. enciclopedista; < The holi man sah the heg engel atte alteres ende.
all at loose eruis.
and worse every day. We are
Tilings are getting worse
S. Judd, Margaret, ii. 7.
encyclopedia + -Mt.] 1. One who is engaged in Old Eng. Homilies (ed. Morris), ii. 145.
the compilation of an encyclopedia. Slowly, easily, gently, softly, negligently, as caring not At one's wit's end, at the end of one's ability to decide
what eride goes forward. Withalt, Diet. (ed. 1608), p. 86. or act in a position whereone does not know what further
;
skepticism of the eighteenth century ; hence the name each end occupies the place that the other did before
an extended surface; especially, the part or as, to turn a plank end for end.
enevdopeditt has been extended to other persons advo-
cating similar opinions. See encyclopedia. limit furthest away from the speaker, or from To shift a fall end for end is to reeve it the opposite
a customary point of view: as, the ends of way, so that the hauling part becomes the standing part.
Very rapidly, after the accession of Catherine 11., the
friend of Voltaire and the Stuyelmmdutt, It (French In- the earth; the southern end of the Atlantic Hamersley.
fluence) sank deeper. D. M. WaUaee, Baisia, p. aSD. ocean ; she is at the end of the garden. (6t) Naut., entirely : said of running ropes, cables, etc,
when entirely run out of the blocks or the hawsehole.^
The application of these principles to social and political
life,aim ttie attempt to give them popular currency, was
the task undertaken by the so-called EneyelopixditU.
W
Anhunting for to pleyen him hi the wode's [wood's] ende.
<tl^'St. Kenelm, L 150 (Early Eng. Poems,
(ed. Fumivall).
End man. ^& end-man. — End on. (a) Having the end
pointing directly toward an object specifically applied in
nautical use to a ship when lier head is in a direct line
:
If. ff. T. Skedd, Hist Christian Doctrine, II. m. And now from end to end with an oljject opposed to broadside on.
:
—
menoptera. [Not in use.] of a series, or of whatever has continuity or
duration conclusion the opposite of begin-
; :
end, tile effect which it is desired to produce upon some-
Encyrtinae (en-sfer-ti'ne), ». pi. pfL., < En- tiling ditFerent from the subject. Thus, the external end
ning : as, the end of time the end of a contro-
eyrttu +
-tn<c.] A
subfamily of the parasitic
versy or of a book; the end of the year or of
;
of oratory is to persuade, while the internal end is to speak
eloquently.— In the end, at last.
hymenopterous insects of the family ChaloicHda.
the season. The very world, which is the world
And ye schulen be in hate to alle men for ray name, but —
Of all of us, the place where, in the end.
be that lasteth into the eende schaal be saaf. We find our happiness, or not at all
Wyetif, Mark xiU. 13.
Wordsworth, Prelude, xi.
At the md of two months . . . she returned. Latter end, the latter part ; the ultimate end the con- ;
Of the increase of his government and peace there shall that they were wise, . that they would consider. .
sects, typical of the subfamily Eneyrtinee. And Katerfelto with his hair on end.
as, candle-en(J8.
encyst (en-sisf ),«'.<. or 1. [< en-l -I- cy«<.] To Thus I clothe my naked villainy
Covrper, Task, iv. 86.
inclose or become inclosed in a cyst or vesicle. With odd old ends, stolen forth of holy writ. (6) In immediate sequence or succession ; continuously.
A different mode of ency$t\ng. ShaJc., Rich. III., i 3. Three times on end she dreamt this dream.
Dt Bary, Fnogi (trans.), p. 442. When Hopkins dies, a thousand lights attend Fair Margaret of Craignargat (Child's Ballads, VIII. 250).
EncTSted tamer, a tumor incloaed The wretch, who living saved a candle's end. He looked out of the window for two hours on end.
in a well-defined
meinhr:i?if;. Pope, Moral Essays, Hi. 293. Dickens.
encystation (en-sis-t&'shon), n. [< encyst + 7. That for which anything exists or is done Principal or chief end, the end or purpose mainly
tended.
in-
Those who hired the fishing of that lake adjoining were < c/i-l +
dear^.] 1. To make dear in feeling;
endamnified much by the violent breaking in of the seas. render valued or beloved ; attach ; bind by ties
To make both ends meet, to make one's income and ex- Sandys, Travailes, p. 276.
penditure balance each other; keep within one's means. of affection.
Worldly wealth he cared not for, desiring onely to make endanger (en-dan'jer), v. t. [Formerly also in- And thou, to be endeared to aking.
both ends meet; and as for that little that lapped over, he danger; < ew-l danger.] +
1. To bring into Made it no conscience to destroy a prince.
gave it to pious uses. Fuller, Worthies, Cumberland. danger or peril; expose to loss or injury. Shak., K. John, Iv. 2.
The other impecunious person contrived to m^ke both What Necessity should move us, moat valiant Prince, I . sought by all means, therefore.
. .
ends meet by shifting his lodgings from time to time. for obtaining of a Title to endanger our Lives? How to endear, and hold thee to me firmest.
W. Black. Baker, Chronicles, p. 15. Milton, S. A., I 796.
To put an end to, to finish ; terminate as, to put an end :
Every one hath a natural dread of everything that can He lived to repent and later services did endear his
;
to one's sufferings.
endanger his happiness. Tillotson. name to the Commonwealth. W. Phillips, Speeches, p. 337
The revolution put an end to the long contest . . . be-
By an act of unjust legislation, extending our power Rafflesia possesses many other sterling qualities far
tween the King and the Parliament. over Texas, we have endangered peace with Mexico. more calculated than simple bigness to endear it to a lai^e
Macaulay, Sir William Temple. Sumner, Orations, I. 8.
and varied circle of insect acquaintances.
Sweet is death, who puts an end to pain. Pop. Sd. Mo., XXVI. 177.
Apprehension seems to exist among the people of the
Tennyson, Lancelot and Elaine. To engage by attractive qualities; win by
Southern States that by the accession of a Republican 2t.
To the bitter end. See bitteri.— To the end of the Administration their property and their peace and per- endearment.
chapter. See chapter.— To the end (that), in order sonal security are to be endaiiqered.
(that). Lincoln, in Raymond, p. 112.
The expenses of his funeral, forty pounds, were directed
to be paid from the public Treasury, "as a testimonial of
schewe how gee schulle knowe and preve to the
I schalle
2t. To put within the danger (of) ; bring with- the Colony's endeared love and aflfection to him."
endethatz^e schulle not been disceyved. MandevUle, p. 51. Plymouth Colony Records, in Appendix to New England's
in the power (of).
Confess them [our sins] to the end that we may ob-
. . , (Memorial, p. 467.
tain forgiveness of the same.
Another giveth the king counsel to endanger unto his
Book of Common Prayer, Exhortation to Confession of Sins. grace the judges of the realm, that he may ever have them 3t. To make dear or costly; raise the price of.
on-his side, and that they may, in every matter, dispute
=Syn. See extremity. Whereas, the excesse of newe buildings and erections
and reason for the king's right.
ME. enden^ AS. endian, hath daily more encreased, and is still like to do so;
6nd (end), v. [< endieUy < Sir T. More, Utopia (tr. by Robinson), i.
whereby and by the immoderate confiuence of people
usually geendian OS, endioriy endon = OFries. = 3t. To incur the hazard of; cause or run the thither, our said city [London] and the places adjoyning,
endia, enda^ einda X>, einden =
OHG. enteon, = risk of. are, and daily will be, more and more pestred, all victuals
enton, MHG. G. enden Icel. enda Sw. dnda = = He that turneth the humours back, and maketh the
and other provisions endeared, &c.
King James's Procl. cone. Buildings (IQIS), Eym. Feed.,
= Dan. end€j end from the noun.] I, trans, ; wound bleed inwards, endangereth malign ulcers and per-
[i. 107.
1. To bring to an end or a close make an end nicious imposthumations.
of terminate : as, to end a controversy ; to end
;
;
Bacon, Seditions and Troubles (ed. 1887). endearancef (en-der' ans), n. [< endear +
Mr. Pincheon offered his assistance, but wrote to the -ance.] Affection. Davies.
a war.
governour . that it would endanger a war.
. .
But my person and figure you'll best understand
On the seventh day God ended his work. Gen, ii. 2. Winthrop, Hist. New England, II. 397. From the picture I've sent by an eminent hand.
Let death, which we expect, and cannot fly from, Albeit I must confesse to be half in doubt whether I Show it young Lady Betty, by way of endearance,
End all contention.
should bring it forth or no, it being so contrary to the And to give her a spice of my mien and appearance.
Fletcher (and another), Sea Voyage, v. 2.
C. Anstey, New Bath Guide,
eye of the world, and the world so potent in most men's i.
Specifically — 2. To bring the life of to an end hearts, that I shall endanger either not to be regarded, or
not to be imderstood. Milton, Church-Government, ii. 1.
endearedly (en-der' ed-li), adv. Affectionate-
kul ; destroy put to death.
; ly; dearly. Imp. Diet.
The Lord of Stafford dear to-day hath bought = Syn. To hazard, risk, peril, imperil, jeopard.
1.
endearedness (en-der'ed-nes), n. The state of
Thy likeness for, instead of thee, King Harry,
;
endangerment (en-dan'jer-ment), n. [< en-
being endeared. More.
This sword hath ended him. Shak., 1 Hen. IV., v. 3. danger -ment.]+ The act of endangeringj or
endearing (en-der'ing), p. a. [Formerly also
Why should I, beastlike as I find myself, the state of being endangered danger.
Kot manlike end myself? our privilege — — He was forced to withdraw aside,
;
indear i ng ; ppr. of endear, v.] Having a ten-
What beast has heart to do it ? And bad his servant Talus to invent
dency to make dear or beloved; awakening af-
Tennyson, Lucretius. Which way he enter might without endangerment. fection as, endearing qualities. :
3. To
furnish the end of, as for protection or Spenser, F. Q., V. ii. 20. Nor gentle purpose nor endearing smiles
embellishment: as, to end a cane with an iron Yokes not to be lived under without the endangerment Wanted, nor youthful dalliance, as beseems
of our souls. Milton, Tetrachordon. Fair couple. Milton, P. L., iv. 337.
ferrule.— 4. To set on end; set upright.
[< ME. endirhen^ *en- With those endearing ways of yours ... I could be
H. intrans. 1. To come to an end or a close endarkt (en-dark'), v. t.
brought to forgive anything.
reach the ultimate or finishing point; termi- derkenj < cw-l derhj dark.] +
To make dark; Goldsmith, Good-natured Man, ii.
nate; conclude; cease: as, a voyage ends with darken. faulty and irregular, but often its faults
All Irish art is
the return of a ship. Yet dyuerse there be industrious of reason, are endearing, and in its is sweet sound.
discords there
Her endethth nu thiss goddspell thuss. 8om what wolde gadder in their coniecture Stedman, Vict. Poets, p. 260.
Of such an endarked chaptre some season
Ormulum, 1. 6514. Howe be it, it were hard to construe this lecture. endearingly (en-der 'ing-li), adv. In an endear-
All's well that ends well. Proverb. Skelton, Garland of Laurel. ing manner; so as to endear,
The angel ended, and in Adam's ear
So charming left his voice, that he awhile endarkent (en-dar'kn), v, t, [< ew-i + darken.] endearlyt (en-der'li), adv. [Irreg. (for dearly)
Thought him still speaking, still stood fix'd to hear. Same as endarJc. < endear + -ly^.] Dearly.
Milton, P. L,, viii. 1. Vapours of disdain so overgrown, Portia so endearly reverenced Cato as she would for his
The philosophy of Plato began inwords and ended in That my life's light wholly endarken'd is. preservation swallow coals. Ford, Honour Triumphant, iit
Daniel, Sonnets to Delia, xxi.
words. Macaulay, Lord Bacon. endearment (en-der'ment), w. [< endear +
2. Specifically, to die. endarteritis (en-dar-te-ri'tis), n. [NL., < Gr. -ment.] 1. The state of being endeared; ten-
Thus ended an excellent and virtuous lady, universally evdovy within, apT-qpia, artery, 4- -itis.] In + der affection; love.
lamented. Evelyn, Diary, Sept. 22, 1652. pathoL, inflammation of the inner coat of an When a man shall have done all to create endearment
To end even. See even^. artery. Also endoarteriitiSj endoarteritis. between them. ' South.
endable (en'da^bl), a. [< end -ahle.^ +
Capa- end-artery (end'ar''''te-ri), n. An artery which, Speaking words of endearment, where words of comfort
ble of being ended or terminated; terminable. with its branches, forms no anastomosis with availed not. Longfellow, Evangeline, i. 5.
; !
phrase put in derer: in, prep., taken in comp. England. Also endellione. ize to a partial extent. [Rare.]
as the prefix en-, -, in-; derer, Oei-or,
deier, devour, auty,
devor, aevour, &atj,
endemialt (en-de'mi-al), a. [< Gr. ivSmtog, be- Yet a Man may live as renown'd at home, in his own
obligation: see derer,devmr.] I. trans. It. io longing to the people: see enrfemtc.] Same as country, or a private village, as in the whole World.
put, apply, or exert (one's self) to do a thing: endemic. For it is Vertue that gives Glory That will endenizon a ;
ita very nature incapable of prolongation, and Wordaworth, *hiii/uK6( for Mr//uoc, equiv. to hidrj/ioq, native, Cliaucer, Knight's Tale, 1. 1918.
in endeavoring it, falls more l>elow himself.
iMwcU, Among my Books, 2d ser., p. 243.
belonging to a people, < tv, in, iivi^oQ, the peo- + But yield them up where I myself must render,
ple: see (feme2. Cf. epidemic.'] I, a. 1. Pecu- That is, to you, my origin and ender.
Shak,, Lover's Complaint, 1. 222,
n. intrans. 1. To labor or exert one's self to liar to a people or nation, or to the residents of
do or effect something^ strive; try; make an a particular locality chiefly applied to diseases. endert, prep. :
An obsolete dialectal form of
effort : followed by an infinitive. This deformity, aa it was endemic, and the people little
under.
used to strangers, it had been the custom ... to look That saw Roben hes men.
But he endetored with speacbes mild As thay atode ender a bow (bough].
Her to recomfort, and accourage bold. upon as the greatest ornament of the human visage.
Spenser, f. t|., 111. vUL M. Goldmtith, The Bee, No. 1. Bobin Hood and the Potter (Child's Ballads, V. 21).
A gi«at slaughter was made after thb among the routed, We have not been able to escape one national and en- ender-dayt, «• [ME., also enders-, enderes-, en-
and many of the first nobility were slain in endeavouring demic hal)it, and to be liberated from interest in the elec- dres-, endris-, andyrs-day,<. ender-, appar. < Icel.
to eacape. Bruce, Source of the Nile, II. 203. tions and in public affairs. Emerson, Misc., p. 329. endr, adv., in times of yore, formerly, before
Amy haatlly endeavoured to recall what ahe were beat A disease is said to be endemic when it is owing (ult. akin to L. ante, before see and, ante-, and
. . . :
to say, which might secure herself from the imminent dan- to some peculiarity in a situation or locality. Thus, ague
Seott, Kenilworth, xixlv.
end) (hardly, as has been suggested, a dial, or
gers that surrounded her. is endemic in marshy countries ; goitre, at the base of lofty
toward some mountains. Dungtison. foreign formof oWiei-, AS. other G. ander, etc.), =
2. To direct one's efforts or labor +
day.] Former day; other day: a word used
object or end; fix one's course; aim: with at, 2. In phytogeog. and zoogeog., peculiar to and only in the adverbial phrase this ender-day, the
for, or after. [Archaic] characteristic of a locality or region, as a plant
other day (that is, at some indefinite time re-
Thinking it aulBclent to obtain immortality by their
or an animal; indigenous or autochthonous in
cently past).
descendants, witliout endeavouring at great actions. some region, and not elsewhere.
Bacon, Physical Fablea, iii., Expl. The mater of the [metyng] mijtow here finde,
It (the New Zealand flora] consista of 835 speclea, our As i descriued ttiis ender day whan thow thi drem toldesi.
It was into this Gulph that Capt. DsrI* w«* gone with own [Britiah) blanda posaeasing about 1500; but a very WUliam of Paleme (E. E. T. S.), I. 3042.
the two Caiioaa, tu endeavour for a Prisoner, to gain intel- large proportion of these are peculiar, there being no less
I me wente tttis endres-daye.
ligence, if poaaible, before our Ship* came in. thui 677 endemic apeciea, and S2 endemic genera. Full faste in niynd niakane my mone.
Dampier, Voyage*, 1. 12S. A. Jt. Wallace.
Thomas of Ersseldoune (Child s Ballads, I. 98).
I could heartily wish that more of oar country clergy They [beeal visit many exotic flowera as readily aa the Quhen I was young this kendre day,
would . eiid«iKmr4/(«ra
. . handsome elocution. endemic kind. iMnrin, CroasandSelf Fertilisation, p.415.
My fadyr wes kepar off yor houss.
Additon, Spectator, No. 106. Endemic disease, a disease to which the inhabitanta of Barbour MS., x. 551.
We have a right to demand a certain amount of reality, a particular country are pecuUarlyaublect, and which for enaermaUC «_j-__,_«p /•^n.^ir-mafikl
(eii-aer mat IK;, a. a Gr ct,
I< "r.
l> ct in
lu, -r +
however small, in the emotion a man who makes reason may supposed to proceed from local cauaea,
of
buaineaa to endeavor at exciting our own.
it his that l)e
as bad air or water. A diaeaae may be endnnui in a par- ()fp//a(r-), the skin (see Oerro), -tC.J Same as +
Lowell, Among my Books, lat ser., p. 369. ticalar aeaaon and not in others, or endemic In one place endermic.
= SyiL Undertake, Endeavor, etc (see aUempt); to seek, and epidemic in another. See epidemic. endermic (en-d^r'mik), a. [< Gr. ev, in, +
aim, i^truggle. n. n. A
prevalence of endemic disease. iipfta. the skin (see derm), -ic] In med., in- +
endeavor, endeavour (en-dev'gr), n. [Early In the light of these instnictive, if not pleasant histori- volving direct application to the skin said of :
mod. E. also endevour; < endeavor, r.] An effort cal facta and surroundings, and of our own investigations,
we are to look for the cause of the recent endemic of fever. that method of
administering medicines in
an essay; an attempt; an exertion of physical Sanitarian, XV. 31. which they are applied to the skin after the
or mental powers toward the attainment of an , ,, , / i i\ a _..-.-.j.—•» epidermis has been removed by blistering. See
endemical (en-dem i-kal), a. Same as «kic»i«c,
.
obiect
His endeuour is not to offend, and his ayme the generall
That fluxes are the general and endemical diseases in -_^Ji^,_._ /_' /j„ •.„„! „
Irelan.l, I necl not tell you. Boyle. Works, II. 190. enderon
(en de-ron), «. rMT rv in 4-
[flL,-, < ^T- .f, m,
<' Cir
f
opinion. (J^pof, the skin.] The substance of skin or mu-
Bp. Earle, Micro-cocmographle, A Plausible Man. endemically (en-dem'i-kal-i), adv. In an en-
cous membrane ; the corium, derma, or true
If the will and the endeavour shall l>e theirs, the per- demic manner. skin, and the corresponding deep part of mu-
formance and the perfecting shall l)e his-
Colds have been known to prevail endemically among cous membrane, as distinguished from epider-
MUton, Apology for Smectymnous.
the healthy crews of veaaela lately arrived from the Arc-
Is the philanthropist or the saint to give up his endea- tic, ^rc. Ci-ui»ei)/tA« Corm'n, 1881, p. 13. mis or epithelium. See cut under skin.
vours to lead a noble life, becanae the aimpiest study of i!\ _ Teeth formed by the calcification of papillary elevations
mans nature reveals, at Ita fonndaUons, all the selflah enttemlClty
, i_ia_ (en-de-mis
,
^
j„ „:„':1-tl),
,^ n, [< endemic +
of the enderon at the lining of the mouth are confined to
"- '"' *"* or quality " of being endemic.
pasdons and flerceampetitea of the merest qoadmped? -ity.] The state ''
the Vertebrata unless ... the teeth of the Echinidea
;
Huxley, Man's Place In Nature, p. 131. The endemicity of cholera In Lower Bengal means that have a similar origin. //tiarifi/, Anat. Invert., p. 66.
To do one's endeavor, to do one's beat exert one's the same aUte of soil which used to arise from time to enderonic (en-de-ron'ik), o. [< enderon
; -ic] +
self. Now cultoq.) time at the great religious fairs has been .^adually and
q^ ^^ pertaining to the enderon of the nature
!
Thinking myself liound In conscience and Chrlatian permanently induced over a wide tract of soil in the baain^i
and delta of the Oangea and Brahmapootra. of, formed by, or derived from the enderon.
cliarity to do my endeavor. CXXVII.
R. Knox (Arber's Eng. Oamer, I. *M\ Quarterly Rev., 209. In Vertebrata true teeth are Invariably enderonic, or de-
my beat endeavors. (en-de-mi-ol'o-ji), n. [< Gr. h- veloped, not from the epithelium of the raucous mem-
And yet I have done endemlology brane of the alimentary canal, but from a layer between
Franklin, Autobiog., p. 448. Mltiio^(si:een(ifmic) +
<>.fyf(v, speak: see
this and the vascular deep substance of the enderon, which
=8yn. Struggle, trial,
-ology.] The scientific study and investigation answers to the dermis in the integument.
endeavorer, endeavoorer (en-dev'or-6r), n. of endemic diseases the knowledge resulting
;
Huxley, Anat. Vert., p. 80.
One who makes an effort or attempt. [Rare.]
may l>e looked for than those which
from such investigation; what is known re- endettedt, «• A Middle English form of in-
'.."'. matters
Greater ..' 1 \' i _ 1./'.
ganlinK endemics. debted.
were the Inventiona of single cndMnnirers or resalta of _^j„„i„,,-. /„„ ,i = '„; ,,o\
chame. Otenm««, Eaaaya, iif. endcmiOUSt (en-de mi-U8), nO. t< Or. h,M,i„nr
[< fir m^/i(Of, ende'Wt, v. t. An obsolete form 'of endue'^, en-
Voice, stature, motion, and other gifta, mnat be very belonging to the people: see endemtc.] Same due^, endued.
bountifully beatowed by nature, or lab<(ur and induatry as endemic. Kersey, 1715. endezoteric (en-dek-so-ter'ik), a. [< Gr. Iv-
will jnuti the unhappy endeavourer in that way the fur- endemism (en'dem-izm), n. [As endem-ie + dov, within, + c^arefiiKdi, outside: see exoteric.']
ther oH Ills wiahea. Steele, Tatler, No. 16T.
-igm.] Same as endemicity. In med., resulting from internal and external
endeavormentt (en-dev'or-ment), n. [Early The Pyrenees are relatively aa rich In endemic species causes simultaneously; including both eso-
mo<l. E. cndevourment ; i. enieavor + -ment^ the Alps, and among the most remarkable instances teric and exoteric agency.
The act of endeavoring ; effort.
"
>r =
Pr. Sp. enrfi-
The Iluabandroan waa meanly well content diavolarc, possess
Triatl to make of his enderourment. ~j. diabolus (> F.
Spenser, Mother Hub. Tale,
diable, etc.), devil see devil] To possess with
I. 297. tween the Val d'Eynes and Catalonia. :
Encyc. Brit., XX. 126.
endeavour, and n. See endeavor.
«. or as if with a devil. Davies. [Rare.]
endeca-. An improper form of hendeca-. endenization (en-den-i-za'shon), n. [< enden- Such an one as might beat endiablee the rabble, and set
endecagon, endecagonal. See hendecagon, hen- ize + -ation.] Admission to the rights of a them a bawling against popery.
decngonal. denizen. [Rare.] Boger North, Eiamen, p. 671.
;; — ; « ;:
To decorate witb or as with a diaper pattern Endlesssaw. Saniea86rt/*rf- within, -I- t^piov, dim. of ^ov L. mum, egg.] =
variegate. m w. - Endless screw, a me- The aetinozoans: so named by Eapp (1829),
chanical arrangement con-
Who views the troubled bosome of the maine sisting of a screw the thread
with reference to their internal genitalia dis- :
Endiapred with cole-blacke porpesies. of which gears into a wheel tinguished from Exoarii.
Clauditis Tiberius Nero, sig. G, 2.
with skew teeth, the obli- endoarteriitis, endoarteritis (en"do-ar"te-ri-
endictt, endictmentt, etc. Obsolete forms of quity corresponding to the
angle
i'tis, -ar-te-ri'tis), n. [NL.] Same as endarte-
indict, etc. of pitch of the screw.
ritis.
It generally used as a
is
ending (en'ding), ». [<ME.
ending, -yng, -ung, means of producing slow endobasidinm
(en'do-ba-sid'i-um), n. ; pi. en-
< AS. endung, verbal n. of endian, end see end, : motion in the adjustments dobusidia (-ii). [NL.j < Gr. hdov, within, -I- NL.
t'.] 1. The act of bringing or coming to an of machines, moving the
basidium.] In my col., a basidium that is in-
valve-gear of marine engines
end ; termination, as of life ; conclusion. by hand, etc., rather than closed in a dehiscent or indehiscent concepta-
Tlie king is not bound to answer the particular endings for the transmission of any Endless Screw and Wheel, cle, as in Gastcromycetes.
of his soldiers, the father of his son, nor the master of his great amount of power. Also endoblast (en'do-blast), n. [< Gr. Ivdov, vrithin,
servant for they purpose not their death when they pur-
; called perpetual screw. =Syn. 1. Eternal, everlasting,
-t- /JAacrof, germ.] In biol., the internal blas-
pose their services. Shak., Hen. V., iv. 1. perpetual, unceasing, imperishable, uninterrupted, bound-
tema or substance of the endoderm same as
Much adoe is made about the beginning and ending of less, immeasurable, unlimited. :
Daniels weekes. Purchae, Pilgrimage, p. 356. endlessly (end'les-li), adv. In an endless man- hypoblast.
ner ; without end or termination. endoblastic (en-do-blas'tik), a. [< endoblast +
2. In grdm., the terminating syllable or letter -ic.] Pertaining to endoblast; constituting or
of a word ; the termination, whether of declen- From glooming shadows of eternal night,
Shut up in darkness erullesdy to dwell. consisting of endoblast ; endodermal hypo- ;
sion, of conjugation, or of derivation.
Drayton, Pierce Gaveston. blastie.
ending-day t, n. [ME. endyng-day. Cf. end-
day.] The day of death. endlessness (end'les-nes), n. [< ME. endeles- endocardiac (en-do-kar'di-ak), a. [< Gr. Mov,
nes, < AS. endeledsnes, < endeleds, endless, -I- within, + KupSia, E. heart (see endocardium), =
To myn endyng-day. Chaucer, Complaintof Venus, L 55. -nes, -ness.] The + -ac. Cf. cardiac] 1. Situated within the
character of being endless
endirkt, »• t. Same as endark. extension without end or limit; perpetuity; heart. 2. Relating to the endocardium, or to —
end-iron (end'i"6m), n. [< end iron. +
In endless duration. Donne. the interior of the heart: as, an endocardiac
the second sense confused with andiron.] 1. endlevet, endlevent, a. and n. Obsolete (Mid- sound or murmur. 3. Situated in the cardiac —
One of two movable iron cheeks or plates used dle English) forms of eleven. portion of the stomach.
in cooking-stoves to enlarge or contract the endlichite (end'lik-it), n. [After Dr. P. M. endocardial (en-do-kiir'di-al), a. [< Gr. ivdov,
grate at pleasure. —
2. One of two short, thick Endlicli.'] An arsenic-vanadate of lead, inter- within, -t- Kapdia, E. heart (see endocardium), =
bars of iron used to hold the ends of the sticks mediate between mimetite and vanadinite, -al.] 1. Situated within the heart. + 2. —
in a wood-fire built on a hearth. The end-irons are found in New Mexico. Pertaining to the endocardium.
generally movable, and can be brought more or less near
endlongt (end'16ng),pre2). and adv. [Early mod. Endocardines (en-do-kar'di-nez), n.pl. [NL.,
at wilL They differ from fire-dogs or andirons in lying flat
upon the hearth. They are much used in the south of E. also cndelong and endalong (as if < end +
< Gr. ivdov, within, -I- L. cardo (cardin-), a hinge
Europe. long or along), < ME. endelonge, orig. andlong, see cardo, cardinal.] group of fossil (Creta- A
endironf, n. An obsolete form of andiron. < AS. andlang, > E. along : see along'^.] I. pre2). ceous) lamellibranch mollusks, containing the
Rudistce only, thus corresponding to the family
enditet (en-dif), v. t. An obsolete form of indite. Along; lengthwise of; from end to end of.
Hippuritidce : opposed to Exocardines. They
enditert (en-di't6r), ». Aa obsolete form of in- This lady rometh endelonge the stronde. . . .
diter. Chaucer, Good Women, 1. 1498. had an inner hinge, with teeth on one valve.
endive (en'div), «. [< ME. endyve D. andij- =
And as thay went endlande Jread endlange] this revere, endocarditic (en'Mo-kar-difik), a. [< endocar-
vie = G. Dan. endivie Sw. endivia, < OF. en- abowte the viij houre of the day thay come tille a castelle ditis + -ic] Pertaining to endocarditis.
=
dive, F. endive —
Sp. endibia, formerly endivia
that stode in a littille ile in this forsaid ryvere. endocarditis (en "do-kiir-di'tis),
MS. Lincoln, A. i. 17, fol. 27. (Halliwell.) endocarditv), < cndocard-ium
n. [NL. (= F.
= Pr. Pg. It. endivia, < ML. intiha, fem. sing., -itis.] In pa- +
And so he went endelonge the Cloyster there we sat at
L. intibus, intubus, intybus, masc, intibum, in- ye table and dalt to euery Pylgryme as he passed a pap wt thol., inflammation of the endocardium.
tybum, neut., < Gr. "evrvjiov, endive. Cf. Ar. relyques of ye holy place aboute Jherusale. endocardium (en-do-kar'di-um), n. [NL., <
hindiba, appar. of European origin.] plant, A Sir R. Guylforde, Pylgrymage, p. 39. Gr. ivSov, within, H- KapSia E. heart.] In =
Cichorium Endivia, of the natural order Com- Sip Cuthbert Ratcliff, with divers of the most wise bor- anat., the lining of the heart, as distinguished
positw, distinguished from the chicory, C. In- derers, devised a watch to be set from sunset to sunrise at from the pericardium, or investing membrane
tybus, by its annual root, much longer unequal
all passages and fords endalong all the middle marches of that organ the membrane forming the inner ;
rently having no limit or conclusion as, end- licli. final) \ end + -ly^.] Final.
; :
orange. The endocarp or stone, the
Jess progression ; endless hlisa; the ewcZtess pur- epicarp or outer skin, and the mesooarp or fleshy part of a
An endly or flnall processe of peace by anthoritie.
suit of an object. Hakluyt's Voyages, I. 206.
peach are shown in the cut.
My sone, God of his endeles goodnesse endely (= MHG. endeliclie,
ME. Endocarpeael (en-do-kar'pe-e), n. pi. [NL., <
Walled a tonge with teeth, and lippes eke, endlyt, adv. [<
Endocarpon (the typical genus) + -ece.] In
For man sholde him avyse what he speke. endliche, G. endlich), finally; < end -ly'^.]
bot., a family of angiocarpous lichens having a
+
Chaucer, Manciple's Tale, I. 218. Finally.
foliaeeous thallus. Also Endocarpei.
Let endlesse Peace your steadfast hearts accord. Pees shalle be whereas now trouble is,
Spenser, Prothalamion, 1. 102. Endocarpese^ (en-do-kar'pe-e), n.pl. [NL., < Gr.
After this lyfe endely in blys.
The endless islands which we have seen along the north- MS. Hart., 3869. (Balliwell.) iv6ov, within, mpnd^, fruit, -I- -ew.] In goal., a +
em part of the Dalmatian shore, bare and uninhabited division of nematophorous C'alen tera ta, contain-
rocks as many of them are, are without history.
end-man (end'man), n. 1. man at one end ing A
those whose genitalia develop from the en-
of a row or line hence, an extremist one who
E. A. Freeinan, Venice, p. 190. ; ;
doderm: opposed to i'etoca J7)<"(r. The division
takes the most advanced view of anything.
It is impossible to conceive a limit to the extent of mat- contains the Scyphomedusa;, and also the Actino-
A very long series of resolutions, expressing the senti- zoa proper or ^ thozoa. Hertu-ig Brothers, 1879.
ter in the universe; and therefore science points rather
ments of a few end men on most of the open questions in
to an endless progress, through an endless space, of action
involving the transfonnation of potential energy into
the broad sphere of modern life, were approved. endocarpein (en-do-lsar'pe-in), a. [< Endo-
palpable motion, and thence into heat, than to a single Science, IV. ;13. carpew + -j«i.] Same as endocarpoid.
finite mechanism, running down like a clock, and stop-
Specifically
ping for ever. Thomson and Tail, Nat. Phil., I. ii., App. E. 2. In minstrel-troupes, a man endocarpoid — (en-do-kar'poid), a. [< Endocar-
pon -i- -Old.] In Uchenology, having the apo-
2. Not having ends returning upon itself so
who sits at an end of the semicircle of perform-
ers during the opening part of tiie entertain- thecia sunken in the substance of the thallus,
;
As sad as earth, as sweet as heaven ! Situated at the very end ; furthest. The headless mollusks : same as Acephala.
O. W. Holmes, The Voiceless. endo- (en'do). [< Gr. hSo-, combining form of endocephalous (en-do-sef'a-lus), a. [< NL.
4t. Without object, purpose, or use.
ivdov, in, within, in the house, at home (= OL. *endocephalns, < Gr. ivdov, within, -I- kkjmH], the
Nothing was more endless than the common method of endo-, indu-, incomp. cf. intus, within), < h; head.] Having the head, as it were, within
comparing eminent writers by an opposition of particu- = L. m = E. ««!.] A prefix in words of Greek acephalous or headless, as a lamellibranch mol-
lar passages in them. Pope, Pref. to Iliad. origin, signifying 'within,' 'inside': equivalent lusk pertaining to the Endocephala.
;
. : : ;;
< Gr. ivfSor, within, + Kipaq (KtfMT-), horn, + endocyclic (en-do-sik'Uk), a. [< NL. endocycli- cous membrane of the stomach; gastritis.
-idtB.] A
family of nautiloid cephalopods hav- cii.f, < Gr. ivdov, witliin, + kvk?.oq, circle.] Hav- endogen (en'do-jen), 71. [< NL. endogentiSy adj.,
ing large holoehoanoid siphons, endoeones or ing a centric anus, as a regular sea-urchin; < Gr. ev6ov, within, +
-yevr/g^ producing: see -gen,
gheaths, an endosiphon, and the whorls fusiform specifically, pertaining to the Endocyclica. Also -genoiis. Cf. the like-formed Gr. hvdoyevi^q,, "born
in transverse section. Hyatt, Proc. Bost. Soc. endncyclical. in the house.] A
plant belonging to one of
Nat. Hist., XXII. 266. Endocyclica (en-do-sik'li-ka), n. pi. [NL., the large primary classes into which the vege-
endocervical (en-do-s6r'vi-kal), a. [< Gr. iviov, neut. pi. of endocyclicus : see endocyclic] An table kingdom is divided : so named from the be-
within, + L. cervix \cervic-), neck, + -fl/.] Per- order of echinoderms, containing the regular lief that the fibrovascular bundles were devel-
taining to the inside of the cervix of the uterus. or desmostichous sea-urchins, having the anus oped only about the center of the stem, in dis-
endocervicitis (en-do-sfer-vi-si'tis), ?i. [NL., < centric, as the cidarids and ordinary sea-eggs tinction from the exogens or * outside growers "
'
Gr. hihv, within, + L. cervix {cervic-), neek, + same as Dcsinosticlia : opposed to Kxncijclica. a monocotyledon, in their structure the eudogens
In pathol., inflammation of the lining of endocyclical (en-do-sik'li-kal), a. Same as cn- ditfer from the exogens chiefly in the absence of a cambium
-itis.']
layer and in the course of the vascular bundles, which, in-
the cervix of the uterus. (loci/clic.
stead of being parallel to each other in successive con-
endochona (en-do-ko'nii), n.; pi. endochoiuB endbcyemate (en-do-si'e-mat), a. [NL., < Gr. centric rings, have a variously oblique or curved direction,
(-ne). [NL., < Gr. cvSoi', within, +
x^l^ a evihv, within, + Ki-T/fja, an embryo (< nvelv, con- crossing each oth-
funnel: see c/ione.] An endochone: distin- ceive), -ate^.] +
In embryol., developed in the er, and forming a
steip which has
Ruislied from ectochona. Sollas. manner characteristic of reptiles, birds, and ordinarily no dis-
endochondral (en-do-kon'dral), a. [< Gr. h- mammals, in which the embryo is bodily Inva- tinction of jjith
(i.ji, witliin, + ^(ivtSpof, cartilage, -ai.] +
Situ- ginated in an involution of the blastodermic or bark, and
membrane, and an amnion is developed in eon- in cross - section
ated witliin a cartilage.
shows the bundles
endochone (en'do-kon), n. [< NL. endochona.'] sequence; amniotic and allantoic, as verte- irregularly dis-
Tlie inner division of a chone. Sollan. brates above batrachiaus: opposed to epicyc- posed, either scat-
endochorion (en-do-ko'ri-on), w. ; pi. endochoria mate. tered over the
(-a). [NL., < Gr. ivim:, within, +
x^P""'^ a mem- The formation of the amnion in the eHdoci/emate types
whole surface or
gathered more
brane, the chorion.] In niiat., the inner chorion of the Chordata. J. A. Btjder, Amer. Nat. (1885), p. 1118.
compactly toward
a term sometimes applied to the vascular layer endocyesis (en'do-si-e'sis), n. pi. endocyeses the circumfer-
of tlie allantois, limng the chorion.
;
ence. The other
en-
(-sez). [NL., < Gr. iviov, within, airiai^, con- + organs of the
endochorionic (en-do-ko-ri-on'ik), a. [< ception, < Kvclv, conceive.] The state or quality plants are also
dochorion +
-ic] Pertaining to the endocho- of being endocyemate the process by which an ; characteristic. Parts of an Endogen.
rion. endocyemate embryo becomes such. The leaves are I. Section of the stem of a palm : e, e, re-
generally paral- mains of /, bundles of woody
leaf-stalks
endochroa (en-dok'ro-a), n. p^L., < Gr. eviov, ;
within. + XP""' Xl'^^^'i surface.] In Imt., a name + Kvari^, bladder: see cyst.] In zool.: (a) The flowers usually
ing the ends of the bundles of woody fiber.
3.Endt^enousleaf, showing its parallel veins.
piven by Hartig to a supposed interior layer of inner layer or membrane of the body-wall of a have three organs 4- Monocotyledonous seed, showing (a) its
in each whorl, the single cotyledon. 5. Germination of palm: b,
the cuticle. polyzoon. If there is no ectocyst, the endo- albumen c, cotyledon d, plumule ; <, radicle
seed has an em-
; ;
endochrome (en'do-krom), «. [< Gr. ivAav, derm forms the entire integument. (6) In Poly- br>'o with one co-
issuing from a short sheath, the coleorhiza.
within, + ;rW"<'i color.] 1. In 6o<., the brown
zoa, the proper ectodermal layer of the organ- tyledon, and the
6. Flower of end<^en.
cell-contents in Diatomacea', colored by diato- ism inside the hard ectocyst, together with the radicle issues from a sheath and is never developed into
min. The term has also been applied generally parietal layer of the mesoderm which lines and a taproot in gennination. The endogens are divided into
to the coloring matter, other t han green, of flow- secretes the cells of the exoskeleton. See cut 84 natural orders, including about l,f>00 genera and from
ers, etc. —
2. In roo7., the highly colored endo- under I'lunialclUi.
18,0(X) to 20,000 species. By the characters of the in-
florescence they are also distinguished as either spadi-
plasm of a cell.— Endochrome plates, the colored ceous, as in tlie PalvuB and Aracece, petaloldeous, as in
portions of the cell-contents of diatuniR. endoderm (eu'do-d^rm), «. [< Gr. Mov, within, tlie Orchidacece, LUiacece, Jridacece, and Amarifllidacece,
endochjrme (en'do-kim), «. [NL., < Gr. hnhv, -I- /lijiiia, skin.] In zool., the completed inner orglumaceous, as in the GramineiVfind Cyi>eracexe. These
within, + x^/idc, juice: see ehyme^.} In zool., layer of cells in all metazoan animals, formed 8 orders embrace over four fifths of the whole number of
the inner chyme-masa; endoplasm. by the cells of the hypoblast or endoblast, and species, the OrchidacetE alone including nearly 5,000. This
class contains many of the most valuable food-producing
endoclinal (en-do-kli'nal), a. [< Gr. Ivdov, with- representing, under whatever motlification, the plants ()f the vegetable kingdom, such as the cereals and
in, + K/.ivtiv, lean (see clinode), + -a/.] In bot., lining of the enteron: opposed to ectoderm. forage -pi ants among tlie grasses, the palms, plantains, etc.
lYimitlvely, it is the wall of the gastrular body-cavity, as and the petaloideous division supplies also very many of
having the clinodo (hymenium) inclosed in a the ectoderm is that of the whole body. Also e7ifO(fer?». the most showy ornaments of the garden and greenhouse.
conceptacle. See cut under ilydrozoa.
The structure of the roots of endogens and exogens is
endocoelar (en-do-se'18r)j a.[< Gr. Ivdmi, with- The Inner, or endoderm. Is formed by the " Invajdnatlon " essentially the same in plan with tlial of their respective
in, + Kiji'/ji^, hollow, Koi/ia, the belly, -ar.] + of that layer Into the space left void by the disaolutiuu of stems. If'. B. Carpenter, Micros., § 375.
Situated on the inner wall, or intestinal surface the central cells of the " morula."
W. B. Carpenter, Micros., f 301. Endogense (en-doj'e-ne), «. pU [NL., fem. pi.
or visceral side, of the coeloma or body-cavity; (sc. plantw) of cndogemts : see endogenous,'] In
Bplanchnopleural used chiefly of bodies (fe-
: endodermal (en-do-d^r'mal), a. [< endoderm hot.y as a classifying name, the endogens. See
nve<l from a four-layered g<?nn, an<l hence with + -«/.] Of or pertaining to the endoderm; monocotyledon,
reference to the splanchnoiileural or visceral constituting an endoderm consisting of endo-
;
endogenetic (en*d6-je-net'ik), «, Having an
division of the mesoderm opposed to cxocalar.
: ilerm. Also entoderinal, vndodermic, cntodermic.
origin from internal causes as, endogenetic dis- :
Tlie intestinal filirous layer. From this Is devclO|>e(I, endodennic (en-do-d^r'mik), a. [< endoderm eases, Itungliaon.
flmtly. tlie eiultx'trUtr : that is, the inner or viscenil ca;lun! + -ic] Same as endodermal. endogenous (en-doj'e-nus), «. [< NL. endo-
fpfthftliiiii, thi.' Iiiyur of cells coverinj^ the outer surface of
till- »li..li- iiiu-stiue. llaecM, Evol. (trans.), I. 271. endodermis (en-do-ddr'mis), w. [NL., < Gr. tv- genus : see endogen.'] 1. In hot.i (a) Of or
I'of, within, +
dip/M, skin.] In bot., the layer pertaining to the class of endogens growing
endocoelarinm (en'do-so-la'ri-um), n. [NL. of modified parenchyma-cells which are united or proceetung from within as, endogenous
;
endocondyle (en-do-kon'dil), n. Same as enlo- endogamous (en-dog'a-mus), a. [< endogain-y wliich are more correctly W. termed exogenous.
U. Carpenter, Micros., § 3C5.
,„,„l,il,: t + -oiix.] Marrying, or pertaining to the cus-
endocone (en'do-kon), n. [< Gr. Ivdov, within, tom of marrying, within the tribe or group; (ft) Originating within ; internal; specificallv,
-- «ui'of, cone.] One of the internal concentric pertaining to, practising, or characterized by formed within another body, as spores within
cones formed by the sheaths of the siphons of endogamy: opposed to exoj;a;«OM«. a sporangium.
gome cephalopods, us those of the family £n- The zygospore is strictly an endogenous formation.
doceratiilw. Hyatt. These (the Roman usus and
confarreatio] are . . . forms liessey.
appropriate to marriages between memijers of the same
endoconic (en-«fo-kon'ik), a. [< endocone -ic] + family-trroup or tribe ; and . . . could only have origi- 2. In anat,: (a) Same as autogenous, (h) In-
I'iii;iiiiirig to tlie endocone of a cephalopod. nated among eiidoffamoui trilies. closed in a common cavity of the matrix, as
endocranial (en-do-kra'ni-al), a. [< cndocra- McLennan, Prim, ^larrlage, Hi. cartilage-cells —
Endogenous ceU-fonnatlon. the
niiim +-«/.] Pertaining to the endocranium; The outer or endofiainmu limit, within which a man or deVL'lopnifiit of daughter-cells within the mother-cell,
situated or taking place within the cranium. woman must marry, has been mostly taken uiuicr the shel- endogenously (en-doj'e-nus-li), adv. In an
endocranimn (en-do-kra'ni-um). «. [NL., < Gr.
ter of fashion or prejudice. It is but faintly traced in Eng- endogenous manner; internally.
land, though not wholly obacured.
IviSov, within, +
K/xiviot', the skull.] In zool. Maine, Early Law and Custom, p. 224.
endo^athal (en-dog'na-thal), a. [< Gr. evSop,
and aiiiil., a collective name for the processes within, H- > vqOo^j Jaw, +
-at,"] Of or pertaining
which project inward from the cranium of an endogamy (en-dog'a-mi), n. [< Gr. tmhv, with- to a modification of the three, terminal joints of
in. + -icifio^, marriage.] Marriage within the the gnathostegite or third thoracic appendage
animal, and serve to support the organs of the
heail: applied by Huxley to the hard pieces tribe: a custom among some savage peoples: in brachyurous crustaceans. See gnathostegite.
found in the head of an insect, and invisible opposed to exogamy. The three terminal joints of the limb remain 8nta1I,and
without dissection, in the cockroach these form a The rule which declares the union of jwrsons of the constitute apalpifonn appendage^ the eiuioffnat/ial im\p.
same blood to be Inceat has been hitherto unnamed. Huxley, Anat. Invert., p. 299.
cruciform luirtitiun in the middle of the head, and they . . .
auunie vari..ii« fi.rms In other Insects. Also called ten- The words endogamy and exogamy (for which botanical endogonidium (en^do-go-nid'i-um), J(.; pi. endo-
torium, and hy Kirtiy refihaUiphrniiuui. strlence affords parallels) appear to i>e well suited to ex-
tress the ideas which stand in need of names, and so we
gonidia (-ji). [NL., < Or. mW,
within, + NL.
There the cockrcachl a sort of internal skeleton
Is |in I
lave ventured to use them, gonidium, q. v.] Agonidium (conidium) formed
(«n/i«MTaniti»t or tentorium), which extends as a cruciform inside of a cell by free cell-formation, as in Sa^
McLennan, Prhn. Marriage, lii., note.
partition from the inner (air of the lateral walls of the
cranium ... to the siiics of the rHcipltal foramen. Evidently endogamy, which at the outset must have prolegniaj MiicoTf FrtMcAfrta, the yeast-plant, etc.
Iliiztry, Anat Invert., p. 348. characterized the more peaceful groups, and which has These endofjonidin heUig set free by the dissolution of
prevailed as societies have become less hostile, is a con- the wall of the parent-cell soon enlarge and comport
endoctrinatet (en-dok'tri-nat), r. t. See indoc- comitant of the higher forms of the family. themselves as ordinary yeHSt-cells.
tniuitf U. Spencer, Prin. of Soclol., { 29a W. B. Carpenter, Micros., §311.
V2l
;; ;
"
[< endoneun- endophytically (en-do-fit'i-kal-i),
~
adv.
:,
Same
otoconites. It is also known as the liquor Scarpm and the
Pertaining to or consisting of en- ^^ entophytically.
vitreous hunwr of the ear.
endolymphangial (en'do-lim-fan'ji-al), a. [< doneurium.
urn -I- -al.]
endpphytOUS (en-dof'i-tus), a. [< Gr. ivSov,
...
(en-do-nii'ri-um), ». [NL., < Gr. within, -I- (pvTov, a plant, + -ous.] In entom.,
Gr. fnio:), within, -I- L. lympha, water (see lymph), endoneurium
+ Gr. ayjciov, a vessel, + -al."] Situated or con- evdov, within, + vevpov, nerve.] In anat., and the penetrating within the substance of plants and
tained in lymphatic vessels an epithet applied delicate connective tissue which supports
: trees; living within wood during a part of life,
to certain nodules in serous membrane in re- separates from one another the nerve-fibers while some transformations are effected: said
lation with the lymphatic system opposed to within the
:
funiculus. of the larvte of certain insects.
endonucleolus (en"d6-nu-kle'o-lus), n. pi. en-
periliimj)hanf/ial: as, endolymphangial nodules. The larva; of the castnians are ;
endophytous, boring
endolymphatic (eu'do-lim-fafik), a. [< ctido- donucleoli (-li). [NL., < Gx.' evdov, within, + the stems and roots of orchids and other plants.
. . .
lymph -I- -(/(ifl.] Pertaining to the endolymph, NL. >(»deo?M«, q. v.] A highly refractive speck C. r. Riley.
particle of protoplasm in the interior of an endoplasm (en'do-plazm), n.
or to the cavity of the labyrinth which con- or [< Gr. ivSov,
tains that fluid ondolymphic as, the endolym- ovum an
; :
endoplastule< ;
within, -I- vXaa/ia,' a, thing formed, < n2,daaeiv,
phatic fluid (that is, the endolymph) the endo- The protoplasm is made very opaque by the presence of form.]
; 1. In bot., the inner granular and
quantity of yolk spherules. A nucleus con-
lymphatic duct (which persists in some verte- a very large somewhat fluid part of the protoplasm of a
taining nucleolus and endonucleoli is always visible after
brates, as sharks, as a cotnmunicatiou between staining or crushing. cell, as distinct from the ectoplasm. 2. In —
the labyrinth and the exterior). See ductus. li. J. H. Gibson, Trans. Roy. Soc. Edin., XXXII. 634. zool., the interior protoplasm or sarcodous sub-
endolymphic (en-do-lim'fik), a. [< endolymph endoparasite (en-do-par'a-sit), n. [< Gr. ev- stance of a protozoan, as a rhizopod, as distin-
+ -ic] Of or pertaining to or of the nature of dov, within, + irapdai-oc, parasite see parasite.] guished from the ectoplasm : same as endosare. :
endometrial (en-do-me'tri-al), a. [< endome- [< endopericarditis + -ic] Pertaining to, of the endoplastic protozoan.
;
trium + -al.] 1. Situated within the uterus. nature of, or affected with endopericarditis. Also entoplastie.
— 2. Pertaining to the endometrium. endopericarditis (en-do-per'i-kiir-di'tis), n. Endoplastica (en-do-plas'ti-ka), n. pi. [NL.,
endometritis (en"d6-me-tri'tis), n. [NL., < [< Gr. ivdov, within, + Trepmapdiov, pericardium,
neut. pi. of *endoplasticus, endoplast.] A
endometrium + -itis.'\ In jjaWio!., inflammation -h -itis.] In pathol., simultaneous inflamma- higher group of the Protozoa, conveniently dis-
of the endometrium. tion of the endocardium and pericardium. tinguished from the Monera or lower Protozoa
endometrium (en-do-me'tri-um), n. [NL., < endoperidia, n. Plural of endoperidium. by the possession of an endoplast, the so-called
Gr. iv6ov, within, -f- /isyrpa, uterus see matrix.] endoperidiai (en'do-pe-rid'i-al), a.
: [< endope- nucleus. See extract under endoplast, and
The lining membrane
of the uterus. ridium +
-al.] Pertaining to or of the charac- moner. The leading divisions of the Etidoplastica, as
endomorpn (en'do-morf), n. [< Gr. iv6ov, with- ter of an endoperidium. named by Huxley, are the Amteboideh (liere called Proto-
in, +
ftop(j}ri, form!] In mineral., a mineral in- endoperidium (en"do-pe-rid'i-um), m. ; pi. en- plasta), Gregarinida, Infusoria, Eadiotaria, and probal^ly
closed in a crystal of another mineral. Thus doperidia (-a). [Nt., < Gr. evdov, within, -I- the Catatlacta.
there are found in quartz crystals a great variety of min- NL. peridimn, q. v.] The inner peridium, where The Protozoa are divisible into a lower and a higher
erals, as rutile, tremolite, tourmalin, hematite, etc.
two are present, as in Geaster. Compare exo- group. ... In the latter —
the Endoplastica a certain —
endomorphic (en-do-m6r'fik), a. [< endomorph portion of this substance [protoplasm] (the so-called nu-
peridinm. cleus) is distinguishable from the rest [Note] I adopt this
-I- -ic] Occurring in the form of an endo- endoperineuritis (en-d9-per"i-nu-ri'tis), n. distinction as a matterof temporary convenience, although
morph of or relating to minerals occurring as [NL., < Gr. evdov, within,
;
NL. perineurium, + I entertain great doubt whether it will stand the test of
endomorphs. further investigation. Huxley, Anat. Invert., p. 73.
q. v., -t- -itis.] In pathol., inflammation of the
endomycnid (en-dom'i-kid), a. and n. I, a. Of endoneurium and perineurium. endoplastular (en-do-plas'tu-lar), a. [< emdo-
or pertaining to the Endomychidce. (en-dof'a-gus), a. [< Gr. ivdov,
endophagOUS plastule ¥ -ar.] Of or pertaining to an endo-
TL. n. AmevaheTotthefa.unlyEndomychidw; within, + (jiayelv, eat, -f -ous.] Cannibalistic plastule; nucleolar^
a fungus-beetle. given to endophagy.
within the tribeendoplastule (en-do-plas'ttd), n. [< endoplast
;
Endomychidae (en-do-mik'i-de), n. pi. [NL., < [As endo})hag-otis -(- -i(?c.] The so-called nucleolus of Protozoa,
A endophagy (en-dof'a-ji), n.
Endomychus + -idle'.] family of trimerous + -y.] Cannibalism practised within the tribe as of an amoeba or other rhizopod, or of an in-
or cryptotetramerous clavicorn beetles, related the practice of devouring one's relations. fusorian, which may lie within or by the side
to the ladybirds or Coccinellida:. Tliey have cylin- (en"do-fle-bit'ik), a. [< endophle- of the endoplast. See out under Paramecium.
drical maxillary palpi with the terminal joint filiform
endophlebitic
long antennae; an elongated head often grooves at the base
;
bitis + -ic] Pertaining to, of the nature of, or Attached to one part of it [the endoplast] there is very
of the prothorax the dorsal segments of the abdomen part-
; affected with endophlebitis. generally ... a small oval or rounded body, the so-called
" nucleolus " or endoplastule.
ly membranous the ventral free
; the wings not fringed endophlebitis (eu'da-fle-bi'tis), ».
; [NL., < Huxley, Anat. Invert, p. 98.
the tarsi typically 3-jointed, with the second joint di-
Gr. evdov, within, + (bMil> MeB-), a vein, -1- , , ,- ,.., ..^ i j , ,
lated and the claws simple. There are about 400 species,
;
endopleura (en-do-plo'ra), «.; pi. endo^leurw
which live on fungi in both the larval and the mature :tis.] In pathol., inflammation of the inner
("''^)- [NL.,< Gr.cK&v, within, -(- x?,CTpa, a nb.
state, and are sometimes called fungm-beetles. In some coat of aI vein
in pi., the ribs, the side.] In bot., the
the tarsi are evidently 4-joint- endophloeum (en-do-fle'um), n. [NL., < Gr. usually cut under
ed. The family is most numer-
within, + bark.] In bot., the delicate inner coat of a seed. See
evdov, <l>7Mt6g,
ous in the tropics. cpisperm.
liber or inner bark. See liber.
Endomychus (en-dom'i- endopleural (en-do-plo'ral), a. [< etidoplcur-
kus), n. [NL. (PaykuU, The internal [layer] or endophloeum., which is more com- + Pertaining to an endopleurite.
(ite) -at]
1798), < Gr. cvSov, within, monly known as the liber.
W. B. Carpenter, Micros., § 372. Also endoplcuritic.
-I- pvx6^, the innermost
part, inmost nook or cor-
ner, < fiveiv, close, shut.]
endophragm (
en'do-frani), n
phragma, < Gr. evdov, withm, -I- *PWa, a parti-
[< m.^ enOo- ^^^^^ j^t^^^^^'U^^/tl
which from the in-
.
^^^^ ^^ ^ crustacean arises
The typical genus of the tion,< ippdaaetv, shutin,fencein. Cf. diaphragm.] terepimeral membrane which connects the so-
family Endomychidce. E. In zool. a kind of diaphragm or partition formed
,
mites; a pleural or lateral piece of the endo-
coccineus and E. higuttatus by apodemes of opposite sides of a somite of a thorax, as distinguished from an endosternite.
are examples. E. hovistce crustacean.
(en-do-frag'mal), a. [< endo- The floor of the thoracic cavity [of the crawSsh) is seen
is a British species E. bi- ; endophragmal to be divided into a number of incomplete cells, or chiim-
guttatus is the only North Funf^us-beetle {Endomy- 2>hraym -I- -al.] Of or pertaining to an endo- bers,by .apodemal partitions, which
. . ai-ise partly . . .
H^uttatus). (Line
American one. shows natural size.) phragm. from the interstemal, partly from the Interepimeral mem-
; ;
tube.
three apophyses, one descending or arthrodial, and two
wliich pass nearly horizontally inwards, endosarc (en'do-sark), n. Gr. cvSov, within, K endosmose (en'dos-mos), n. [= F. endosmose,
Huxley, Anat, Invert,, p, 269, adp^ (aapK-), the flesh.] In zoiil., the inner + < NL. endosmosis, q. v.] Same as endosmosis.
endopleuritic (en'do-plp-rit'ik), a. [< endo- or interior sarcode or protoplasm of the amoe- M. Poisson has further attempted to show that this
pleuritc + -ic] Same as endopleural. bffl or other protozoans, in any way distin- force of endosmose may be considered as a particular modi-
fication of capillary action. WhewelL
endoplutonic (en-do-plp-ton'ik), a. [< Gr. ev- guished from the exterior sarcodous substance
Au, within, +
E. plutonic.'\ An epithet applied orectosarc; endoplasm. It corresponds to the gen- endosmosis (en-dos-mo'sis), n. [NL., < Gr. ev-
bv some geologists to rocks "supposed to have eral substance of a cell, as distinguished from a cell-wall
«" ""c.eus. See
and cell-nucleus. cut.under Paramecium.
see cut
thi', within, +
impulsion, < ioOelv, push,
uafidg,
bien generate! within the first-formed crust ""^ thrust, impel.] The transmission
of a fluid
of the earth " endosarcodous (en-do-sar'ko-dns), a. [< en- inward through a porous septum or partition
endopodite (en-dop'd-dit), n [< Gr. Ivdov with-
dosarc (sarcode)
^
-Oiis.] Same as endosar- + which separates it from another fluid of differ-
iu, + -01 f (to<!-) = E.foot, + -ife.] The inner «'>?'''
one of the two main The general phenomenon of the interdiffusion of fluids
-oiig.'\ Pertaining to or of the nature of endo- through septa, including both endosmosis and exosmosis,
divisions of the typi- is termed diosmosis or osmosis, but endosvtosis is also used
sarc.
cal limb of a crusta- in this sense. The phenomena differ from diffusion prop-
the opposite endoscope (en'do-skop), n. [< Gr. Ivdav, within, er in being affected by the nature of the septum. —
cean Elec-
:
are parts l)orne upon that part of the body, especially the bladder, uterus, diaphragm from the anode to the cathode. Some of the
laws of the phenomenon have been made out, although it
part which is called the and stomach. is not fully understood. The amount which passes is pro-
protopodite, and both are
variously moditied in dif-
endoscopic (en-do-skop'ik), a. [< endoscope + portional to the intensity of the current and to the spe-
ferent parts of the body -!>.] 1. Pertaining to or effected by means cific resistance of the liquid, and is independent of the area
A. Hyatt, Proc, Amer, Assoc, Adv. Sci., XXXII. 328. the same temperature, and may be termed endosmotic force.
endopoditic (en-dop-o-dit'ik), a. [< endopodite
Sachs, Botany (trans.), p. 597.
+ -ic] Of or pertaining to the endopodite. endosiphonal (en-do-si'fon-al), a.
[< endosi-
f ni the other hand, the inner or tndopoditic division of phon + -*/?.] Pertaining to or having the char- Endosmotic equivalent, the ntimber expressing the ra-
tio of the amount by weightof water which passes through
the antenna becomes immensely lengthened, and at thi acter of an endosiphon. a porous membrane into a saline solution to that of the
same time annulated. while the outer or exopodillc divi- endoslnhonate (en-do-Si'fon-at), O. [< endosv- amount of salt passing in the opposite direction.
sioii remains relatively short, and acauirei iU character-
Huxfay, CrayHah, p. 218.
i ^i Uavmg
/*"<>» + -o«e*.J
ti.^__ an
.
" -i
purtnair^hnn
enaosipnon. endosmotically (en-dos-mot'i-kal-i), adv. By
istic »cale like form.
[NL., neut. The endofiphonate and transitional types [of cephalo- means of endosmosis in an endosmotic man- ;
Endoprocta (en-d6-prok't4), n. pi.
periods have a common character.
pods] of these ner.
p\. 01 'endoproctua: soo endoproctous.'] divi- A
A. Hyatt, Proc. Amer. Assoc. Adv. Sci., XXXII. 328. nutritive fluid passes endositwtictUly into the body
sion of the Poluzoa, established by Nitsche, ,
endoskeletal
j-t,, i,.,
(en-do-skel e-tal), a. [< ettdo-
.,.,, The
parenchyma. Clans, Zoology (trans.), p. 307.
having the anna inside of the circle of tenta-
elesTbpposed to JSctoproeta. skeleton -<il.-i Of pertamu to the endo-
or pertaiiiiing + endosomal (en'do-so-mal), a. [< endosome -f-
iliilinicliuf, < Gr. ivAov, within, irpunTdf, anus.] + some and ectosome.
Pertaining to or having the characters of the In some sponges a part of the endoderm and associated
Endnproeta : as, an endojiroctous polvzoan. mesoilerm may likewise develop indeitendcntly of the rest
endoptile (en-dop'til), a. [< Gr. ^fiW, within, of the sponge, as in the Hexactinellida, where the choano-
-I- rrriXav, feather, down, wing, leaf.] Same some forms a middle layer between a reticulation of ecto-
some on the one side an<l of endoderm and mesoderm,
as monocotyledonous : an epithet proposed by 1. e., endosome, on the other. Kiicyc. Brit., XXII. 415.
Lestiboudois, because the plumule is inclosed
within the cotyledon.
endosperm (en'do-spferm), n. [< Gr. evAcyv,
within, -I- anlppia, seed.] In hot., the albumen
endoral (en-do'ral), a. [< Gr. fvtov, within, + of the seed ; the substance stored in the ovule
L. OS (or-), mouth, -a/.] +
Situated between
or seed about the embryo for its early nour-
till' adoral and preoral cilia in certain Oxytri-
ishment. By recent authors it is limited to the deposit
rhiiiir; said of certain cilia. formed within the embryo-sac. Iu some seeds, as of the
endoreif, '. '• [ME. endoren, endouren, < OF. Cannacea, there is an additional deposit within the testa,
endorer, gild, glaze, < «t- dorer, F. dorer, gild,+ but outside of the embryo-sac, which is distinguished as
< LL. chaurare, ^d: see deattrate, and cf. Segiaeiit ol Endockeleton from Thocmck Region of CiocodUe. the perigperm. See albumen, 2, and cut under epigperm.
adore^, Doratlo, dory^."] In cookery, to make theC, neural centrum of a vertebra, over which rises the neural arch, inclosing The macrospore of these plants gives rise to a small cel-
canal and ending in .VS. the neural spine Z, prexyga- ;
lular prothallium bearing one or more archegonia, which
of a bright golden color, as by the use of the pophySLs; .? posUygapophysis 7"r, transverse proccsswhich .-irticu- .
;
in the Rhizocarps extends beyond the limits of the spore,
lates with /, tubercle of a rib C*/. that which articulates with C/.
but does not become free from it ... in the Phanero-
:
yolks of eggs; glaze. capitulum of a rib; f>, ossified veriebral nb. or pleurapophysis
;
Pr. endossar =
Sp. endosar =
Pg. endossar, < F. nomycetous fungi and angiocarpous lichens. Nature had largely endowed William witli the qualities
endosser, OF. endosser, put on the back, indorse of a great ruler. Macaulay, Hist Eng., vii.
endothecium (en-do-the'si-imi), n. [NL., < Gr.
< en, in, +
dos, < L. dorsum, the back: see h'6ov, within, +
OijKii, a case see theca.] In :
Beings endowed with life, but not with soul.
and cf. indorse, endorse.'] To put on 0. W. Holmes, Autocrat, x.
dorse, 1. hot.: (a) The inner lining of an anther-cell.
the back; put on (armor). (6) In mosses, the central mass of cells in the Endowed Schools Act, a British statute of 1869 (32 and
33 Vict., c. 56), empowering commissioners to remodel
Tliey no so<mer espyed the mominges mistresse, with rudimentary capsule, from which the arche- such schools as had been founded and endowed for special
disheueled tresses, to mount her iuorie chariot, but they spore is generally developed. purposes, to alter or add to tlie trusts, directions, and
endossed on their armours.
endothelial (en-do-the'li-al), a. [< endothe- provisions of the endowments, or to make new trusts, etc.
Knight of the Sea, quoted in Todd's Spenser, VI. 294, note.
lium + -al.] Of, pertaining to, or of the na- Also known as Forster's Act. =Syn. Endue, Endow. See
2. To write engrave ; carve.
;
ture of endothelium.
end\ie^.
1. Of or pertaining to the endosteum; situ- Medical News, LII. 301. This once renowned church was gloriously decked
. . .
apodeme of a crustacean which arises from the endothermic (en-do-th6r'mik), a. [< Gr. ev(^ov, the endowments of a church, hospital, or college.
intersternal membrane connecting successive within, + dcpii7!,hea.t, + 4c.] Relating to absorp- A chapel will I build, with large endowmejit. Dryden.
somites; a sternal piece of the endothorax. tion of heat. Endothermic compounds are those whose Professor Stokes, having been appointed to deliver three
See endopleurite. Milne-Edwards; Huxley. formation from elementary substances is attended with ab- annual courses of lectures, on the endoumient of John
sorption of heat, and whose decomposition into other sim- Burnett, of Aberdeen, chose Light as his general subject.
endosteum ( en-dos 'te-um), n. ; pi. endostea (-a). pler compounds or into elements is attended with liber- Pop. Set. Mo., XXVI. 129.
[NL., < Gr. hSov, witliin, + bariov, a bone.] 1. ation of heat. Nitroglycerin and other explosives are ex-
In anat., the lining membrane of the medullary amples of endothermic compounds. 4. That whichgiven or bestowed on the per-
is
cavity of a bone ; the internal periosteum, it endothermous (en-do-ther'mus), a. Same as son or mind nature in the plural, nat-
;
gift of ;
is a prolongation of the fibrovascular covering of a bone indnlhcrmic. ural equipment of body or mind, or both ; at-
into its interior through the Haversian canals, finally endothoracic (en'do-tho-ras'ik), a. [< endo- tributes or aptitudes.
forjning a delicate vascular membrane lining the medul- + I had seen
thorax (,-ac-) -ic] Pertaining to the endo-
lai-y cavity.
thorax of an arthropod; situated in the tho- Persons of meaner quality much raore
2. Cuttlebone. Exact in fair endowments. Ford, Lady's Trial, i. 2.
racic cavity.
endostoma (en-dos'to-ma), n. ; pi. etidostomw
His early endowments had fitted him for the work he
(-me). [NL., < Gr. cvSov, within, ardiia, the + endothorax (en-do-tho'raks), n. [NL., < Gr. was to do. Is. Taylor.
mouth.] 1. In zoiil., a part situated behind
ti'rfoi', within, +
6upa^, a breastplate, the chest.]
In arthropods, as crustaceans and insects, the One of the endowments which we have received from
and supporting the labrum in some Crustacea. the hand of God. Sumner, Fame and Glory.
— 2. In pathol., an osseous tumor within a apodemal system of the thorax or the cephalo-
thorax, formed by various processes and con-
The very idea that reforms may and ought to be effected
bone. peacefully implies a large endowment of the moral sense.
tinuations of the dermal skeleton, and so con- H. Spencer, Social Statics, p. 473.
endostome (en'do-stdm), n. [< Gr. eviov, with-
+oTo/m, the iuouth.] 1. In hot.: (a) The stituting an interior framework of this part of Endowment policy, or, in full, endowment Insurance
in,
orifice at the apex of the inner coat of the ovule. the body, supporting and giving attachment to policy, a life-insurance policy of whicli tlie amount is pay-
soft parts, as nerves and muscles. able to the insured at a specified time, or sooiier to bis rep-
(6) The inner peristome of mosses. See cut resentatives should he die before the time named. = SyiL
under exostome. — 2. In zool., same as endos- These processes are very greatly developed on the
cephalothorax of the higher Crustacea. They are found
3. Bequest, preacTit, gift, fuud. —
4. Acquirements, Ac-
toma. quisitions, Attainments, etc. (see acquirement)', gift, tal-
chiefly in the head and thorax in many orders of the In- ent, capacity, genius, parts. See comparison under f/cm'iis.
endostosis (en-dos-to'sis), m. [NL., < Gr. Ivdov, secta, where they form a complicated structure known as
within, + bartov, bone, + -osis.'] 1. Inpathol., the endvthorax. Gegeiibaur, Comp. Anat. (trans.), p. 249. end-paper (end 'pa "per), n. In hooWinding,
the formation of an endostoma. 2. Ossifica- — one of the white or blank leaves usually put be-
Endothjrrinse (en"d9-thi-ri'ne), n. pi. [NL., fore and after the text of a book in binding, one
tion beginning in the substance of cartilage. < Gr. ivfhv, within, -t- Bipa, a door, + -in(B.] A or more in each place. End-papers are not to be con-
endostracal (en-dos'tra-kal), a. [< endostra-
subfamily of Lituolidm with the test more cal- of wliichone leaf is pasted
ciim + -ah] Pertaining to or consisting of en- careous and less sandy than in the other groups founded with the liniiig-papers,
down inside of each cover, and the other corresponds to
dostracum. of Lituolidm, sometimes perforate, and with it in the color of its outer surface.
endostracum (en-dos'tra-kum), n. [NL., < septation distinct. end-piece (end'pes), «. l. A distinct piece or
Gr. ev6ov, within, + oarpaKov, shell.] The inner
endoutet, f * [ME. endouten, < OF. *endouter, part attached to or connected with the end of a
layer of the hard shell or exoskeleton of a crus- later endoubter, < en- + douter, fear, doubt: see tiling ; specifically, in a watch, the support for
tacean. oj-i and doubt^.] To doubt ; suspect. the end of a pivot. 2. A transverse timber or —
endostyle (en'do-stil), n. [< Gr. hdov, within, And if I ne had endouted me
bar of iron by which the ends of the two wheel-
+ a-liAoQ, a column: see style'^.'] A longitudi- To have ben hated or assailed, pieces of a truck-frame are connected together.
nal fold or diverticulum of the middle of the My thankes wol I not haue failed. Car-Builder's Diet.
hemal wall of the pharynx of an ascidian, which Rom. of the Rose, 1664.
end-plate (end'plat), «. In anat., the expanded
1.
projects as a vertical ridge into the hemal sinus endow (en-dou'), V. t. [Formerly also indow -termination of amotor nerve in a muscular fiber
contained between the endoderm and ectoderm, (also endew, endue : see endued) ; < MB. endowen, under the sarcolemma.
but remains in free communication with the < AF. endower, OF. endouer (= Pr. endotar), < en- end-play (end'pla), ?i. The play or lateral mo-
pharynx by a cleft upon its neural side. From + doner, doer, P. doner, endow: see dovA, doto- tion of an axle, etc. Also called end-shake.
one point of view it appears deceptively as a hollow rod, er"^, dowry. Ct.endue'^.] 1. To bestow or set- endreet, endryt, r. t. [ME. endryen, (only once)
whence the name. Huxley. See cuts under Doliolidoe
and Ti/ni'fata. tle a dower on provide with dower. ; erroneously for adryeti, adrigen, < AS. d-dre&-
endostylic (en-do-stil'ik), a. [< endostyle + -ic] With all my
worldly goods I thee endow. (jan, suffer, < a- + dreogan, ME. drigen, dryen,
Of or pertaining to the endostyle of ascidians. Book of Common Prayer, Marriage Service. dree : see dree^.] To suffer.
— Endostylic cone, a short ca^cal process of the endoderm I would not marry her, though she were endowed with In courte no lenger shulde I, owte of dowte,
forming the extremity of the endostyle in the embryonic all that Adam had left him before he transgressed. Dwellen. but shame in all my life endry.
ascidian. Shalt., Much Ado, ii. 1.
Court of Love, I. 72a
endostylic cone gives rise to the whole alimentary
The A wife by law entitled to be endowed of all lands and
is
[< en-^ + drudge^-]
canal of the bud. Huxley, Anat. Invert., p. 525. tenements of which her husband was seized in fee sim- endrudget (en-druj'), v. t.
ple or fee tail during the coverture. Blackstone. To make a drudge or slave of.
endotet, »• '• [< en- + dote^. Cf. endow.'] To
2. To settle money
or other property on; fur- A slave's slave goes in rank with a beast such is every ;
(-se). Oj/k^ a case ing Hospitals and Alms-houses for theimpotent, distem- end-speecht
see theca.] The hard structure upon the inner per'd, and aged Poor. StUlingJleet, Sermons, II. vii. Diet.
;
:; ; ! ; ;
durabUUy of the atmosphere within the chamber. Rom. of Partenay (E. E. T. S.), 1. 4629.
or opposition put up with.
;
B. W. kichardton, PrevenL Med., p. 336. adv. Lastingly for
We shalbe able to brooke that which other men can in- enduringly (en-dur'ing-li), ;
see endue\ indue^.] Same as ependyma. a subject of such a state. 4. That which is in- — The Passions.
To me hath Heaven with bounteous hand assigned
Collins,
iom., a genus of butterflies, named by Swain- tive noun, and construed with a verb or pronoun either in to be productive of more energical and powerful preacii-
son in 1832. Its only species, E. regalis, is now the singular or plural. ers than any church in Europe.
placed in the genus Evenus. 2. genus of — A The enemy thinks of raising threescore thousand men
for the next summer.
Waterhotise, Apol. for Learning (1653), p. 85.
Addieon, State of the War.
crustaceans. energico (e-ner'je-ko),a. [It. : see energic] In
endysis (en'di-sis), n. [NL., < Gr. kvivaig, a We have met the enemy, and they are ours. music, energetic: indicating a passage to be
putting on (of clothing), an entering into, < h- Com. O. H. Perry (m despatch announcingthe battle rendered with strong articulation and accentu-
[of Lake Erie, Sept. 10th, 1813).
dveiv, put on, get into see endyma.'] In ornith.,
:
ation.
the acquisition of plumage by a bird ; the act (b)The adversary of manicind the devil Satan, ; ; (c)
energize (en'6r-jiz), v. pret. and pp. energized,
Time as, how goes the enemy ? ( = what o'clock is it?)
: ; to
;
E. N. E. An abbreviation of east-northeast. Dickens, Nicholas Nickleby, xix. First comes, of course, the creation of matter, its cha-
-ene. [< L. -enns (Gr. -rivoc), an adj. term, as =Syn. AntagoniM, Opponent, etc. See adversary. otic or nebulous condition, and the energizing of it by the
brooding spirit. Science, III. 600.
in serenus, serene, terrenus, terrene, etc. Cf. II, a. H. Inimical hostile opposed. ; ;
-anus (E. -an), -inus (E. -ine, -in), -onus (E. -one), They every day grow more enemy to God.
. . .
II. intrans. To act with energy or force op- ;
etc.] 1. An adjective termination of Latin Jer. Taylor. erate with vigor; act in producing an effect.
origin, as in serene, terrene. —
2. In chem., a 2. In international law, belonging to a public Those nobler ecstasies of energizing love, of which flesh
termination indicating a hydrocarbon which enemy; belonging to a hostile power or to any and blood, the animal part of us, can no more partake than
it can inherit heaven. Horsley, Works, III. xxv.
belongs to the oleftne series, having the gen- of its subjects as, enemy property. :
eral formula C„H2„: as, ethylene (C2H4), pro- Enemy ship does not make enemy goods. Also spelled energise.
pylene (CgHfi). i'ncyc. Brit., XIII. 195. energizer (en'6r-ji-zer), n. One who or that
enecatet (en e-kat), V. t. [< L. enecatus (also enemylf, *• which gives energy, or acts in producing an
[ME. enemyen, < OF. enemier, effect. Also spelled energiser.
t'-
enectus), pp. of enecare, enicare, kill off, < e, out, ennemier, < L. inimicare, make hostile, < inimi-
+ necare, kill.] To wear out exhaust kill off.
; ;
cus, hostile, an enemy
Every energy is necessarily situate between two sub-
see enemy^, n.] To be stantives an energizer, which is active, and a subject,
:
:
Some plagues partalte of sucli a pernicious degree of hostile. Wyclif. wliich is passive. Harris, Hermes, i. 9.
malignity that, in the manner of a most presentaneous
(en'e-mi), «. A dialectal corruption of
poison, they enecate in two or tliree hours, suddenly cor- enemy^ energumen (en-6r-gu'men), n. [= F. energu-
rupting or extinguishing the vital spirits. anemone. = =
mene Sp. energiimeno Pg. It. energumeno,
Harvey, The Plague. Doon i' the woild' enemies. < L. energumenus, < Gr. ivEpyov/xevoc, ppr. pass,
en 6chelle (on a-shel'). [I*.: en, in; cchelle, Tennyson, Northern Fanner (0. S.).
of hcpytiv, effect, execute, work on see ener- :
ry through or to the end, < did, through, + i/vey- diseases by applying remedies, as plasters, given uggly disturbances to these good spirited men in
their temple-work. C. Mather, Mag. Chris., i. 3.
Keiti (-y/ *evcK, *cve-yK), associated with ipepecv =
blisters, etc., to the skin.
E. 6earl.] A
continued fever. enerdt, ^. *. [ME. enerden, < en- + erden,X AS. The Catechumens, Energumens, and Penitents, says S.
Dionysius, are allowed to hear the holy modulation of
enedt, «. [ME., also ende, < AS. ened, a duck: eardian, dwell, < eard, country see eard.] To Psalms, and the Divine recitation of sacred Scripture, but :
see rfrafccl.] A
duck. dwell; live. the Church invites them not to behold the sacred works
enema ( en'e-ma or e-ne'ma), n. [NL., < Gr. Ofte faght that freike & folke of the Cit^, and mysteries that follow.
eve/ia, an injection, clyster, i htcvat, inject, send With Enmys enerdande In ylis ahoute. J. M. Neale, Eastern Church, i. 208.
Destruction 0/ Troy (E. E. T. S.), L 12867.
in, < iv, in, + ievai, send.] 1. PI. enemata (e- energy (en'6r-ji), n. pi. energies (-jiz). [= D. ;
nem'a-ta). In med., a quantity of fluid injected energetic (en-er-jet'ik), a. [< Gr. ivepyrrriKoi;, G. energie Dan. Sw. energi, < F. Anergic Sp. = =
into the rectum ; a clyster; an injection. active, < cvcpydv, be in action, operate, tr. ef- energia Pg. It. energia, < LL. energia, < Gr. =
41 any adhere to the old plan and still use enemata of food
fect, < hepydc, at work, active see energy.] hcpyeia, action, operation, actuality, < hvtpyij^,
:
(an<l stimulants) not specially prepared, such as ordinary Possessing, exerting, or manifesting energy; active, eft'ective, later form of ivepyd^, at work,
milk, beef-tea, and brandy. J&ur. Ment. ScL, XXX. 22. specifically, acting or operating with force and active, etc., < h, in, + epyov E. work.] 1. =
2. [cap.] In entom.., a genus of scarabaaoid vigor; powerful in action or effect; forcible; The actual exertion of power power exerted ;
beetles, founded by Hope in 1837. There are vigorous as, an energetic man or government : strength in action vigorous operation. ;
about 6 Mexican and North American species. energetic measures, laws, or medicines. Tlie world was compact, and held together by its own
enemiablet, a. [ME. enemyable, enmmble, < OF. If then we will conceive of God truly, and, as far as we bulk and energy. Bacon, Physical Fables, i., Expl.
enemiable, ennemiable, anemiable, < ML. 'inimi- can, adequately, we must look upon him not only as an There is no part of matter that does ever, by its sensible
eternal, but also as a being eternally energetick. qualities, discover any power or energy, or give us ground
edbilis (in adv. inimicabiliter), unfriendly, hos-
'N. Grew, Cosmologia Sacra, i. 1. to imagine that it could produce anything.
tile, < L. in- priv. + amicabilis, friendly, ami-
Nitric acid of 40° is too eneryetic and costly. Hume, Human Understanding, i. § 7.
cable: see amicable, and cf. enemy^.] Hostile; W. H. WahZ, Galvanoplastic Manipulations, p. 34. The last series of cognate terms are act, operation, ener-
inimical.
The most energetic element in contemporary socialism gy. They are all mutually convertible, as all denoting
A hure he made agea the enmyable [var. eneviyable] is political rather than economical. "the present exertion or exercise of a power, a faculty, or
folc. Wydi/, Ecclus. xlvl. 7 (Oxf.). liae, Contemp. Socialism, p. 106. a habit. Sir W. Hamilton, ^letaphysics, vii.
enemityt, n. .An obsolete form of enmity. = Syn. strenuous, assiduous, potent. We must exercise our own minds with concentrated and
enemy' (en'e-mi), n. and a. [Early mod. E. energetical (en-er-jet'i-kal), a. [< energetic + continuous energy. Channing, Perfect Life, p. 19.
also enemie; < ME. enemy, enemy e, often synco- -al.] Same as energetic. [Rare.] My desire, like all strongest hopes,
By its own energy fulfill'd itself.
pated enwitf (cf. enmity), < OP. enemi, anemi, F. He would do veneration to that person whose name he Tennyson, Gardener's Daughter.
ennemi =
Pr. enemie =
Sp. enemigo =
Pg. ini- saw to be energetical and triumphant over devils.
Jer. Taylor, Works (ed. 1836), I. 270. 2. Activity considered as a characteristic ha-
migo = It.
nemico, < L. inimicus, an enemy, lit.
bitual putting forth of power or strength, phys-
;
an unfriend, < in- priv., E. «n-l, + amicus, energetically (en-fer-jet'i-kal-i), adv. With
= ical or mental, or readiness to exert it.
a friend: see amiable, amicable, amity. Cf. in- force and vigor with energy and effect. ;
imical, inimicous.] I. n. pi. enemies (-miz). energeticalness (en-6r-jet'i-kal-nes), n. The Something of indescribable barbaric magnificence, spir-
; itualized into a grace of movement superior to the energy
1. One who opposes, antagonizes, or seeks to quality of being energetic; activity; vigor.
of the North and the extravagant fervor of the East.
inflict, or is willing to inflict, injury upon ano- Scott. Hotvells, Venetian Life, ii.
ther, from dislike, hatred, conflict of interests, energetics (en-6r-jet'iks), n. [PI. of energetic:
3. The exertion
of or capacity for a particular
or public policy, as in war; one who is hostile see -ics.] The science of the general laws of kind of force action or the power of acting in
;
With my wyf, I wene, A science whose subjects are material bodies and physi- the active faculties or modes of action regard-
We schal yow wel acorde, cal phenomena in general, and which it is proposed to call
That watz your enmy kene. the science of energetics. ed severally, and often in the plural as, crea- :
Sir Gawayne and the Green Knight (E. E. T. 8.), 1. 2406. Rankine, Proc. of Phil. Soc. of Glasgow, May 2, 1866. tive energy; the energies of mind and body.
. ;
power, potency, or potentiality. Thus, Jirst enerriy is transform the potential chemical energy of coal or wood sweet weariness that follows accustomed toil.
exercise
tte stote of acquired habit secoiul eneryy, the ;
and oxygen of the air into mechanical energy, as in a mill Hawthorne, Biithedale Romance, x.
of a habit : one when he has learned to
sing is a singer m and in a voltaic battery the potential energy of the zinc p^prtrativp (p-npr'va-tiv or en'fer-va-tivl. a. \<.
ftrH energy; when he is singing, he is a singer in second and acid is transformed into the energy of an electric cur- ®?®'."*?3™ ''V. ^ irf." _° _.„„: ™„\„i";„i„
energy. See oct.
^ „ . • rent, and this in turn may be transformed into liglit and enervate -ice.'] +
Efaving power or a tendency
6. A fact of acting or actually being. heat, or mechanical motion, or chemical separation (as in to enervate ; weakening. [Rare.]
All verbs that are strictly so called denote
energiet. electroplating). It is found, however, that in every trans- enervet (f-nerv'), v. t.
formation, while no energy Is absolutely lost, a consider-
[= D. enerveren 6. =
Harris, Hermes, 1. 9.
able portion is lost as useful or available energy, being
enerviren '= Dan. enervere Sw. enervera, < F. =
6. Inritet., the quality of awakening the
imagi- transformed into useless heat further, it can be shown cnerver
;
Sp. Pg. enervar = It. enervare, < L. =
that the process which is continually going on is a change enervarc, take out the nerves or sinews, < ener-
nation of the reader or hearer, and bringing the from a higher type of energy to a lower, as from heat at vis, enervus, without nerves or sinews, < e, out,
meauing of what is said home to him ; liveliness. a high temperature to heat at a lower —
that \&, a degra-
+
nervus, nerve, sinew: see nerve. Cf. ener-
dation or itittsipation of energy. If the change were to
Who did ever, in French authors, see
go on until all bodies were at the same temperature, vate.'] To weaken; enervate.
The comprehensive English energy >
Rotcainmon, On Translated Verse. then no work of any kind would be possible. The prin- Such object hath the power to soften and tame
cipal stores of energy on the earth, available for the pur- Severest temper, smoothe the rugged'st brow,
Waller was smooth ; but Drjden taught to join poses necessary to human life and comfort, are (a) the Bnerve ... at will the manliest, resolutest breast.
:
The varying verse, the full resounding line. energy of coal, wood, oil, and other combustibles; (6) of Milton, P. R., li. 165.
The long majestic march, and energy divine. water In motion, or in an elevated position (c)of air In ;
Age has enerv'd her charms so much.
Pope, Imit of Horace, II. i. 269. motion, as the wind (d) the muscular energy orftnim.ils. approach.
:
That fearless all her eyes
To these might be added the energy of direct solar raiiia-
7. In physics : (a) Half the sum of the masses
Dorset, Antiquated Coquet.
tion, the energy of the tides, and some others of less Im-
of the particles of a system each multiplied portance. The source of all these forms of energy, except enerVOSe (e-nfer'vos), a. [< U. enervts, enervUS,
by the square of its velocity; half the vis viva. that of the tides. Is to be found In the radiant energy <>( ^-ithout nerves or sinews (see enerve), -1- -ose.]
the sun.— Energy of recoil, the capacity for work which a
See vis vita. This sense, introduced by Dr. Thomas body has uiKm a recoil, as a gun when fired.— Energy Of
In bot., without nerves or veins: applied to
Young is now obsolete. It gave rise to the following, rotation or translation, the capacity of a body for do- leaves.
which was introduced about 1860 liy .Sir William Thom- ing work in virtue of its motion of rotation or translation. enervous (e-nfer'vus), a. [< L. enervts, enervus,
son, and is now widely current. (6) Half the great- See mo( ion.— Extensive energy, the number of dllferent without nerves or sinews (see enerve), -ous. +
est value to which the sum of the masses of all cooperating powers whlcli enter into a mental state. The force ; weak ; powerless.
the particles of a given system each multiplied phr.ise Is also applied to a kind of elasticity. Radiant Ct.enervose.] Without
—
energy, that form of energy which is emitted by a hot [Rare.]
by the square of its velocity, could attain ex- l,ody and which Is propagated by undulations In tlie lu- They thought their whole party safe ensconced behind
cept for friction, viscosity, and other forces de- miniferous ether at a rate of about 186,000 miles per sec- the sheriffs of London and Middlesex, with their partisans
pendent on the velocities of the particles; oth- ond, as the energy sent out by a stove, by the electric arc- of ignoramus and that the law was enermus as to them.
;
light, or by the sun. Every body sends out radiant energy, Stale Trials, Stephen College, an. 1681.
erwise, the amount of work (see tcork) which a
given system could perform were it not for re- ';r^ri:.^r^^'^T^'^:.°^nl'J^^f^ZT.^^^^ a^r. Middle EngUsh form of once »
enest, a
sistance dependent on the velocities. The law of are added others of shorter and shorter wave-length, eneucll, enSUgh (e-nueh ), a., n.,
and adv.
a>
energy is precbely the principle tliat tliese two deflnitlons When the temperature of a solid body is raised to about Scotch forms of enough.
are equivalent. This law applies solely to forces depen- 800- C. It begins to be luminous- that U, to radiate rays jj^ ^^^^ ^^ ,^^^ eneiich may soundly sleep,
dent alone on the relative positions of particles that — of red light —and as it grows hotter it emits rays corre- ,j,^j, q ,;r(.o„,e o„iy fashes folk to keep. Ramsay.
is,to attractions, repulsions, and their resultants. It is sponding to the successive colors of the spectrum. AtlbOO ,,.,-,, t. ,• i e ^
Middle English form ofc mfamy. A
j,
shown mathematically that, taking any two level or ecjui-
which a particle
cVit becomes white hot —
that is, radiates all the rays of enfamet, n.
puteiitial surfaces (see e<iuipotential) the spectrum. That portion of radiant energy which is Teittament of Love.
might traverse in its motion, the difference of the squares Inaipable of affecting the eye Is g.MuralI.y spoken of as
of iu velociUe* as it passed through them would be the famiUe (on fa-mely'). [F. : en, in ; famille,
radiant A^iK, In distinction from ra./irtiK /i./'if. heeheat, "r,,.!;!;)^!
same no matter from what point of space it started, nor l.!7A«, fj)atru.n.-TheUwof theconservaUonofen- [annly.J With one s fnmilv-
With nnn'a tamily, flompsticallv
aomesncaiiy, at at.
what might he the direction and velocity of its Initial mo- ergy or of force, the law that, fundamentally speaking, home.
tion. Thiu, the square of the velocity at any instant could there are no forces in nature to which the law of energy Deluded mortals whom the great
be deduced fnjm that at any other by simply adding or does not apply the principle that the total energy of the
; Choose for companions tete-iit«te,
subtracting a quantity dependent merely on the positions universe Is constant, no energy being created or destroyed Who at their dinners cn/amiMe
at these instants. In like manner, if a number of parti- In any of the processes of nature, every gain or loss In one Get leave to sit where'er you will. Swift.
cles were moving about, subject to mutual attractions and
repulsions. It is shown in dynamics that if to the sum of l2r.°oVhrrTrS?^rS,''s'"li^rrrlZ.^T/»J.) enfaminet.__.,___ [ME enfan,ynenenj^nnme,i;<
the roaaes,each multiplied l>y the square of its velocity, This is the great fundamental principle of modem physics en-l +
famine.] I. trans. To make hungry;
be added a certain quantity dependent only on the posi- it wa* perbsp* first enunciated by K. F. )tohr in 1837, famish.
tions of the particles at that instant, this last sum would though several physicists were Independently led to Its To become hungry famish.
II. intrans. ;
n-main constant throughout the motion. Of these quan- discovery. Those uniformities of nature which present
tities, iialf the mass of a particle into the s<iuare of its
His folke forpyned
phenomena of irreversible actions— such as friction and
velocity is termed its aelual energy, or energy of nwtion other resistances, the conduction of heat and the phenom- Of werynesse, and also enfamymd.
— that Is, iU kinetie activity ; while the quantity to be ena of the second law of tlierraodynamics in general,
Chaucer, Good Women, 1. 2429.
added to the sum of the actual energy in order to obtain a ciiemi'cai' reactions, the growth and' developmenl^ of or- enfamisht (en-fam'ish), V. t. [< en-'^ -i- famish.]
consUnt sum is termed ttie potential energy— ttuit Is, the ganlc forms, etc.— cannot, according to this doctrine, re- ,„ f„,„i-i,^
latent or slumbering activity, or energy of fOtUian ; the suit from the lawsof force alone, but are to be account-
i" lamisu. ...
constant sum being tenned the lotal energy. The corre-
f„,.. ;. <y Ol .enfarcir,
[Also %nfaree ^r.fnr^ir <
<. nw
ed as .UtUtical uniformities, due to vast numbers of for- enfaicet, »• '•
s|»>n<iing general principle of physic* that the total en- b tultously moving molecules. =8yn. 2. Activity, Intensity, Jj,infarcire, infercire, stuff into, stuff, < »», in,
ergy of tlie physical iiiiivene is constant; this is the prin- push, stir, zeal. -f fareire, stuff: see en-1 and/arcc, v.] To fill;
ciple of the per'itience or eonmnation qf energy. (See be- pret.
low.) Etamples of actual energy are the energy of sensi-
enervate (e-nfer'vat or en'6r-vat), t;. t. ;
^^^q_
ble motion as in a moving cannon-ball, of sound-waves, of and pp. enervated, ppr. enervating. [< L. ener- ^^^ ^jj,j ,,^11158, but with souls, replenished and en-
heat of |»tential energy, the energy of position of a weight
; ratus, pp. of enervare, deprive of nerves or /arcfd with celestial meat. Baun, Potation for Lent, 1. 91.
raised alwve the earth, of elasticity as in a bent bow, of sinews, weaken : see enerve.] 1 . To deprive of enfauncet. ". A Middle English form of infancy.
electricity, chemical combination, etc. Potential or po-
nerve, force, or strength weaken ^ renderfee- gjjfauntt, "-
; Middle English form of infant. A
sitional energy and actual or kinetic energy are In in-
cessant Interconverslon ; for positional energy implies ble: as, idleness and voluptuous indulgences Heefaunl.
force, or a t»-n'lency to motion, as much as kinetic energy enerrate the body. enfavort, enfavourt, v. t. [< e«-i favor, fa- +
impliw motion or change of position. Thus, in the case For great empires, while they stand, do enervate and de- vour.]
of a »wiiicing pendulum, the actual energy is null at the
To favor.
stroy the forces of the natives which they have subdued, any shall enfavour me so far as to convince me of any
tuniioL; i«iinU at the extremities of the swing, while the If
resting upon their o»ne protecting forces.
shall in the second edition . return
IM>teiiti;iI energy is at its minimum when the center of error therein, I . .
of a body of a definite mas* moving with a definite velocity. In the deep Organ's more majestick Sound.
Congreve, Hymn to Harmony. So much hath hell debased, and pain
Clerk Maxmtt, Matter and Motion, art. xcvli.
Enfeebled me, to what I was in heaven.
If we mnltiply momentum
of every particle of
half the Without these intervening storms of opposition to ex- Milton, P. L., ix. 488.
a b>Kly by iu velocity, and add all the result* together, we ercise his faculties, he would become enervate, negligent, Some . . . enfeeble their understandings by sordid and
shall get what in ailed the kinetic
r energy of the body. and presumptuous. Ooldsmith, National Concord. brutish tiusiness. Jer. Taylor, Holy Living.
«'. A'. Cllford, lectures, II. 29. = Syn. See under fnciMfe
enervation (en-^r-va'shon), n. [= F. Nerva- list
tained. crease tbe force or strength of ; make strong By sweet enforcement and remembrance dear.
For thee y ordeyned paradijs j strengthen; fortify. Keats, Ode to Psyche.
Ful riche was thin en/egement. That
Political Poems, etc. (ed. Furnivall), p. 163. Hur seemely cities too sorowen hem all, 2. which enforces, urges, or compels;
Enforced were the entres with egre men fele, constraining or impeUing power; efiicient mo-
enfermt, v. t. A
Middle English variant of That hee ne might in tliat marche no maner wende. tive ; impulse ; exigence. [Archaic]
affirm. Alisaunder of Macedoine (E. E. T. S.), I. 908.
Let gentleness my strong enforcement be.
enfertilet, v. t. [< en-i +
fertile.'] To fertilize And what there is of vengeance in a lion Shak., As you Like it, ii. 7.
Ilie rivers Dee Chaf'd among dogs or robb'd of his dear young,
. . and Done make way for themselves
. The Law enjoyns a Penalty as an enforcement to Obedi-
and ev/ertile the fields. The same, enforc'd more terrible, more mighty,
ence. Setden, Table-Talk, p. 60.
Holland, tr. of Camden's Britain, ii. 46. Expect from me. Beau, and PL, Philaster, v. S.
Rewards and punishments of another life, which the
enfetter (en-fet'er), V. t. [< en-'i- +
fetter.] To 2. To urge or impress with force or energy Almighty has established as the enforcements of his law.
fetter ; bind in fetters. make forcible, clear, or intelligible : as, to en- Locke.
His soul is so enfettefd to her love, force remarks or arguments. His assumption of our flesh to his divinity was an en-
That she may make, unmake, do what she list. This fable contains and enforces many just and serious forcement beyond all the methods of wisdom that were
ever made use of in the world. Hammond, Fundamentals.
Shak., Othello, ii. 3. considerations. Bacon, Physical I'ables, ii., Expl.
enfever (en-fe'v&r), v. t. [< cn-i +
fever, after 3. To gain or extort by force or compulsion
3. The act of enforcing; the act of giving force
F. enfUvrer.] To excite fever in. [Rare.] compel : as, to enforce obedience. or effect to, or of putting in force ; a forcing
In vain the purer stream upon the understanding or the will : as, the
Sometimes with lunatic bans, sometimes with prayers,
Courts him, as gently the green bank it laves. Enforce their charity. Shak., Lear, ii. 3.
enforcement of an argument by illustrations;
To blend the enfexxring draught with Its pellucid waves. enforcement of the laws by stringent measures.
Anna Seward, Sonnets. My business, urging on a present haste,
Enforcelh short reply. Ford, Lady's Trial, i. 1. —
Enforcement act, an act for enforcing the collection
enfiercet (en-fers'), v. t. [< e»-i +
fierce.'] To 4. To put or keep in force; compel obedience of the revenues of the United States, passed in 1833
after the nullification of the tariff act of 1832 by South
make fierce. to; cause to be executed or performed: as, to Carolina.
But more enfierced through his currish play. enforcer (en-f or'sfer), n. One who or that which
Him sternly grypt, and, hailing to and fro, enforce laws or rules.
To overthrow him strongly did assay. Law confines itself necessarily to such duties as can be compels, constrains, or urges ; one who effects
Spenser, F. Q., II. Iv. 8. enforced hy penalties. by violence ; one who carries into effect.
//. N. Oxenham, Short Studies, p. 31. Jnlio. Witli my soveraignes leave
enfilade (en-fi-lad'), n. [< F. enfilade, a suite of
I'll wed thee to this man, will he, inll he.
rooms, a string (as of phrases, etc.), a raking 5t. To discharge with force ; hurl ; throw. Phil. Pardon me, sir, I'll be no love enforcer:
fire, lit. a thread, < enfiler, thread, string, rake As swift as stones 1 use no power of mine unto those ends.
(a trench), rake (a vessel) : aeeenfile.] Milit.,a, Enforced from the old Assyrian slings. Fletcher (and Ilmcley), Maid in the Mill, v. 2.
Shak., Hen. V., iv. 7.
line or straight passage ; specifically, the situ- That is even now an Ineffective speaking to which grimace
ation of a place, or of a body of men, which may 6. To impel; constrain; force. [Archaic] and gesture ("action," as Demosthenes called them) are
For competence of life I will allow you, not added as enforcers. Whitney, Encyc. Brit., XVII. 767.
be raked with shot through its whole length.
That lack of means enforce you not to evil. enforcible, «. See enforceable.
enfilade (en-fi-lad'), v. t. ; pret. and pp. enfiladed, Shak., 2 Hen. IV., v. 5.
T^pr. enfilading. [< enfilade, n.] JSfaii., to pierce,
Through fortune's spight, that false did prove,
enforci'vet (en-fdr'siv), a. [< enforce +
-ire.]
scour, or rake with shot through the whole I am inforc'd from thee to part.
Serving or tending to enforce or constrain;
length, as a work or line of troops ; be in a The Merchants Daughter (Child's Ballads, IV. 329). compulsory.
position to attack (a military work or a line of Thou Shalt live, Cces. But might we not win Cato to our friendship
troops) in this manner. If any soul for thee sweet life will give. By honouring speeches, nor persuasive gifts ?
Enforced by none. Me. Not possible.
The Spaniards, carrying the tower, whose guns com- William Morris, Earthly Paradise, I. 318. Cces. Nor hy enforcive usa^ef
pletely enfiladed it, obtained possession of this important Chapmnn, Caisar and Pompey, i. 1.
pass into the beleaguered city. Prescott, Ferd. and Isa. i. 7. 7t. To press or urge, as with a charge.
enforcwelyt (en-for'siv-li), adv. By enforce-
,
While this was going on, Sherman was confronting a If he evade us there,
rebel battery which etMaded the road on which he was Enforce him with his envy to the people. ment; compulsorily. Marston.
marching. U. S. Grant, Personal Memoirs, I. 505. Shak., Cor., iii. 3. enforest (en-for'est), V. t. [Formerly also en-
A strong and well-constructed earth-work, which was so Now, when I come to inforce, as I will do, forrest; < OP. cnforester, < ML. inforestarc, con-
placed as to enfilade the narrow and difllcult channel for Your cares, your watchings, and your many prayers.
Your more than many gifts. B, Jonson, Volpone, i. 1. c«-t and
vert into forest, < in, in, +
foreata, forest: see
a mile below. J. Jt. Soley, Blockade and Cruisers, p. 210.
forest.] To turn into or lay under
Enfilading battery. See battery. 8t. To prove evince. ; forest; afforest.
! ! ; ! ! ;;
forsooth. '\ To make true; rectify; reform. For ferdnes of a fowle enfray. He engaged seven [reindeer], which arrived the next
Y enfoTsothe me othir whilis. Towneley Mysteries, p. 179. evening, in the charge of a tall, handsome Finn, who was
And thinke y wolde lyue a trewe lijf. +/ree.] To to be our conductor. B. Taylor, Northern Travel, p. 109.
enfreet (en-fre'), t». «. [< en-i set
PoliticalPoenu, etc. (ed. Fumivall), p. 183.
free ; release from captivity. 4. To gain win and attach draw;
; ; attract and
enfortt (en-fort'), « t. [< OF. enfortir = Pr. To render him. fix : as, to engage the attention.
enfortir =
It. infortire, strengthen, < L. in, in, For the enfreed Antenor, the fair Cressid. Your bounty has engag'd my truth.
-- fortis, strong see fort, and cf enforce.'] To
: .
Shak., T. and C, iv. 1. Ford, Lover's Melancholy, iii. 2.
strengthen; fortify. enfreedomt (en-fre'dum), t'. t. [< oi-l free- + Tlie Servant . . . joyfully acquaints his Master how
Aa Salem braveth with her hilly bullwarks. dom.] To give freedom to ; set free. gratefully you receiv'd the present : and this still engages
Roundly enforXed, soe the greate Jehova him more; and he will complement you with great respect
By ray sweet soul, I mean, setting thee at liberty, en- whenever he meets you. Dampier, Voyages, II. i. 55.
Closeth his servantes, as a hilly bullwark '
freedoining thy person. Shak., L. L. L., ill. 1.
Ever abiding. This humanity and good-nature engages everybody to
Sir P. Sidney, Pa. cxxv. enflreezet (en-frez'), ». *. {< en-'^ + freeze.] To him. Addison, Sir Koger at Home.
enfortlinet (en-f6r'tun), V. t. [ME. enfortunen, freeze ; turn into ice ; congeal. While the nations of Europe aspire after change, our
< OF. eiifortuner, <"<?'«- + fortune, fortune: see Thou hastef^ros«n her disdainefull brest. constitution engages the fond admiration of the people
cii-i smOl fortune.] To endow with a fortune. Spenser, In Honour of Love, L 146. by which it has been established.
Bancroft, Hist. U. S., I., Int.
He that wropht it enfortuyied it so enfrenzy (en-fren'zi), V. t. ; pret. and pp. en-
Tliat every wight that had it shnlde have wo. frenzied, ppr. enfrenzying. [< en-l fremy.] + 5. To occupy; employ the attention or efforts
Chaucer, Complaint of .Mars, 1. 259. of : as, to engage one in conversation ; to be
To excite to frenzy; madden. [Rare.]
enfonlderedt, p. a. [Pp. of 'enfoulder, < OF. engaged in war; to engage one's self iu party
With an enfremied grasp he tore the Jasey from his
eti- + foitldre, F.foudrc, < li.fitlgur, lightening, head. Barham, Ingoldsby Legends, IL 363. disputes.
flashing, < /M/jrere, flash : 8ee/u/^e«(.] Mingled I left my people behind with my firelock, and went
en froid (on frwo). [F. : L. in, in ; froid,
en, <
alone to see if 1 could engage them in a conversation.
with lightning. < L. frigidus, cold.] In a cold state said of : Bruce, Source of the Nile, I. 157.
Hart cannot thinke what outrage and what cries.
anything which is more commonly put on or
With fowie enfouldred smoakeaud Hashing Are, Thus shall mankind his guardian care engage.
The hiUbred beast threw forth unto the skies. finished by the agency of heat. Pope, Messiali, 1. 65.
Spenser, F. Q., I. li. 40. Specimens on which gold is applied en
(of majolica) Sir Peter. So, child, has Mr. Surface returned with you?
pret. and pp. en- froid. South Kensington Handt>ook, Spanish Arts. Maria. No, sir, he was engaged.
enfirame (en-fram'), r. t.;
Sheridan, School for Scandal, liL 1.
framed, ppT. enframing. [< e7i-l -l-/ra»ie.] To enfrowardt (en-fro'ward), r. t. [< en-1 -1-
fro-
inclose in or as in a frame. [Rare.] ward.] To make froward or perverse. It is considered extremely sinful to interrupt a man
when engaged in his devotions.
All the powers of the house of Godwin The multitudeof crooked and side respects, which are E. W. Lane, Modem Egyptians, I. 92.
Are not enframed in thee. Tennyson, Harold, i. 1. the only clouds that eclipse the truth from shiuing more
Oat of keeping with the style of the relief upon the gates lightly on the face of the world, and the only pricks 6. To enter
into contest with bring into con- ;
which it [the frieze] enframes. which so er\froxcard men's affections as not to consider flict encounter in battle as, the army engaged
; :
C. C. Perkint, lUlian Sculpture, p. 115. and follow what were for the best, do cause that this chief the enemy at ten o'clock.
unity nndeth small acceptation.
enfranchise (en-fran'chiz), f. t. ; pret. and pp. Sir E. Sandys, State of Religion. He engageathe bravest warrlorof all the Greeks, Achilles
[Formerly and falls by his hand, in single combat.
rnfranrhised, ppr. enfranchisinij.
enfnmet (en-fiim'),enfumer = Pr. v. t. [< F. Bacon, Moral Fables, i.
also infranchige; < OF. enfranchis-, stem of cer- enfumar, smoke, blind with smoke, < en- + fu-
tain parts of enfrancliir, enfraunchir, enfran- The great commanders of antiquity never engaged the
mer, smoke: see fume.] 1. To dry or cure by enemy without previously preparing the minds of their
chier, get free, enfranchise, < en-, franchir, + —
smoking; smoke. 2. To blind or obscure with followers by animating harangues.
set free: see /raHcAwc] 1. To set free; lib- smoke. Irving, Knickerlxwker, p. 368.
erate, as from slavery ; hence, to free or release Perturbations gainst their Guides doe fight.
. . .
Grey was forced to leave Herbert, and hurry back to
from custody, bad habits, or any restraint. And so enfume them that they cannot see. bring up the reserves returning, he attacked Arundel
;
flexive pronoun or (rarely) a noun or personal dertake as, a friend has engaged to supply the
taking part in public elections : as, to enfran- :
retained their names and functions, the latter as a means I hare enga^dmnM to a dear friend. [I. 89).
by which the freemen of the borough were ei\franchi»ed. Shak., M. of V., Hi. 2. How proper the remedy for the malady, I engage not.
StubtH, Const. Hist. (2d ed.X 1 810. To the Pope hee inga^d himself to hazzard life and es- Fuller.
4. To endenizen-; naturalize. tate for the Roman Religion. Milton, Eikonoklastes, xx. I. dare engage, these creatures have their titles and dis-
Besides disposing ofpatronage, civil, military, legal,
all tinctions of honour. Sun/t, Gulliver's Travels, 11. 3.
words have been enfranchised amongst as. Watts.
Tliese
and he [Lord Townsheiid] en-
eccleaiaatical, for this end, How commonly . .nilers have en£?a;?crf, on succeeding
.
= 8yn. 1. ^(i>iinnit, Liberate, etc. ^ee emancipate. gaged bimaelf to new pension* said to amount to 25,000f. a to power, not to change the established order
enfranchisement (en-fran'chiz-ment), n. [< year. (Jladstone, Mneteenth Century, XXIL 4«1. II. Spencer, i'rin. of Sociol., § 468.
enfranchise +
•rnent.'] 1. The act of setting The league between virtue and nature engages all things
2. To occupy one's self be busied^ ; take part:
free; release from sutTery or from custody; to assume a hostile front to vice. Emerson, Compensation.
as, toengage in conversation; he is zealously
enlargement. 2. To pawn ; stake ; pledge. engaged in the cause.
As low as to thy foot does Caasins fall. He is a noble gentleman ; I dare
To beg enfranchisement tar Publias CImber. Engage my credit, loyal to the state.
'Tis not indeed my talent to engage
SAa*., J. C.,111. In lofty trifles. Dryden, tr. of Perslus's Satires.
1. Ford, Love's .Sacrifice, I. 2.
2. The admission of a person or persons to the Tlie present argument is the most abstracted that ever
For an armour he would haue engaged vs a bagge of
I engaged In. Swift, Tale of a Tub, Ix.
freedom of a state or corporation; investiture pearle, but we refused.
Quoted John Smith's True Travels,
In Capt. I. 83. All her slumbering energies engage with real delight In
with the privileges of free citizens; the incor- M. Baker, New Timothy,
And most perfidiously condemn what lies before them. H'. p. 318.
porating of a person into any society or body
Those that engag'd their lives for them. 3. To have an encounter; begin to fight; enter
politic; now, specifically, bestowment of the
S. Butler, Iludlbras, II. II. 338.
electoral franchise or the right of voting. into conflict.
He that commends another engager so much of his own
How came the law to retreat after apparently advancing reputation as he gives to that person commended. I'pon advertisement of the Scots army, the Earl of Hol-
farther than the Middle Eomaa Law iu the proprietary Steele, Spectator, No. 188. land was sent with a body to meet and engage with it.
enfranehUfment nt women? Clarendon, Great Rebellion.
Main*. Karly Ill»t. of Institutions, p. 32.1. 8. To secure for aid, employment, use, or the It is a part of the military art to reconnoitre and feel
Enfranchisement of copyhold lands, a legal convey- like; put under requisition by agreement or your way before you engage too deeply.
ance in fee simple uf cupybuld tenemeuts by the lord of bargain; obtain a promise of: as, to engage Washington, in Bancroft's Hist. Const., I. 454.
; :
water-clock) was a small toothed wheel, with which the B. Jonson, Alchemist, ii. 1.
certain concessions on the king's part, engaged to deliver
toothed rack en;jaged, and which was, therefore, caused him from captivity by force of arms. =8501. 2. Pledge, etc. Vain hopes, vain aims, inordinate desires,
to turn by the rise of the tioat.
American Anthropologist,
(see promise, n.), contract. 8. Conjtict, Fight, etc.—See Blown up with high conceits ingenderinfj pride.
I. 47. battlel. Milton, P. L., iv. 809.
Engaging and disengaging machinery, machinery in engager (en-ga'jer), n. 1. One who engages From the prejudices engejidered l)y the Church, I pass
which one part is alternately united to and separated from
another, as occlusion may require.
or secures. —
2. One who enters into an engage- to the prejudices eTigendered hy the army itself.
Sumner, Orations, I. 59.
ment or agreement a surety. ;
engaged (en-gajd'), «. a. [Pp. of engage; t-.] = S3m. 2. To call forth, create, give rise to, occasion, stir
1. Affianced; betrothed: as, an engaged pair. And that they [Italian operas] might be performed with up.
— 2. Busy or occupied with matters which can-
all decency, seemliness, and without rudeness and pro-
faneness, John Maynard and several sufficient citizens
II. intrans. 1. To be caused or produced;
not be interrupted not at leisure as, when I were engagers.
. . .
call I always find him engaged. 3. In arch., Takp hede they speake no wordes of villany, for it
3. [cap.']In Scottish hist., one of a party who causeth much corruption to ingender in them.
partly built or sunk into, or having the appear-
ance of being partly built or sunk into, some- supported the treaty called " The Engagement," Babees Book(E. E. T. S.), p. 64.
thing else as, engaged columns. and who joined in the invasion of England con- Thick clouds are spread, and storms engender there.
:
. . .
controverters of what is found it would lessen the num- engaging unconsciousness of childhood. Tlie ingenderers and ingendered.
;
you could but endear yourself to her affection, you were 2. Descent ; lineage.
gager, etc.), engage : see engage and -ment.'] 1. eternally engallanted. B. Jonson, Cynthia's Revels, iv. 1.
The act of engaging, binding, or pledging, or Hys engendrure to declare and tell,
Comyn is he off full noble linage.
the state of being engaged, bound, or pledged. engaolt (en-jal'), V. t. An obsolete form of en- Rom. of Partenay (E. E. T. S.), 1. 634.S.
jail.
These are they who have bound the land with the sinne
of Sacrilege, from wliich mortal ingagement wee shall engarboilt (en-gar'boil), V. t. [< en-1 gar- engild (en-gild'), V. t.; pret. and pp. engilded,
+
never be free till wee have totally remov d with one labour boil.'] To disorder. cngilt, ppr. engilding. [< en-l -I- gild.] To gild;
as one individual! thing Prelaty and Sacrilege. brighten.
Milton, Apology for Smectymnuus. It is strange, that for wishing, advising, and in his owne
particular using and ensuing tliat moderation, thereby not Fair Helena ; who more engilds the night
2. That to which one is engaged or pledged to engarboiie the church, and disturb the course of piety,
Than all yon fiery oes and eyes of light.
Shak., M. N. D., iii. 2.
an agreement ; an appointment ; a contract ; an he should so bee blamed. . . .
undertaking: as, he failed to fulfil his engage- Bp. Monntagu, Appeal to Cajsar, ix. engint, An obsolete spelling of engine. «
ment. engarland (en-gar'land), V. t. [< en-t gar- engin. An abbreviation of engineering. +
If the superior officers prevailed, they would be able land.] To encircle with a garland. [Poetical.] engin-Jl-'verge (F. pron. on-zhan'a-verzh'), n.
to make good their engagement ; if not, they must apply
Rinses I oft invoked your holy aid,
military engine or catapult for throwing large A
ttiemselves to him [the king] for their own security. !
stones, barrels of combustibles, etc., by means
Ludlow, Memoirs, I. 186. With choicest flowei-s mv speech f engarland so.
Sir P. Sidney (Arber's Eng. Gamer, I. 680). of a mast or staff rotating about one end, and
We damsels shall soon he obliged to carry a book to en- having at the other a spoon, hook, or other de-
rol our engagements ... if this system of reversionary Engarlanded and diaper'd
dancing be' any longer encouraged. With inwrought flowers. vice for holding the projectile.
Visraeli, Young Duke, ii. 3. Tennyson, Arabian Nights. engine (en'jin), n. [Also dial, ingine, ingin; <
Specifically —
3. The state of having entered engarrison
(en-gar'i-sn), v. t. e»-l gar- ME. engin, engyn, engen, rarely ingyne (with ac-
[< +
cent on second syllable, whence by apheresis
into a contract of marriage ; betrothal: as, their rison.] To place in garrison or in a state of
engagement has been announced. 4. That— defense. often gin, gyn, ginne, gynne, > mod. E. gin*, q.
v.), < OF. engin, enging, engeng, engeinh, enginh,
which engages or binds ; obligation. In this case we encounter sin in the body, like a be-
sieged enemy ; and such an one, when he has engarrison'd natural ability, artifice, a mechanical contri-
He was kindly used, and dismissed in peace, professing
much engagement for the great courtesy he found there. himself in a strong hold, will endure a storm. vance, esp. a war-engine, a battering-ram, F.
Winthrop, Hist. New England, II. 232. South, Works, IX. v. engin =
Pr. engin, engen OSp. engeito, Sp. =
This is the greatest engagement not to forfeit an oppor. There was John engarrison'd, and provided for the as- ingenio =
Pg. engenho =
It. ingegno, < L. inge-
tunity. Hammond, Fundamentals. sault with a trusty sword, and other implements of war. nium, innate or natural quality, nature, genius,
Glanville, "Witchcraft, p. 127.
Religion, which is the chief engagement of our league. a genius, an invention, in LL. a war-engine,
Stilton.
engastrimythf (en-gas'tri-mith), n. [Also en- battering-ram, < ingignere (pp. ingenitus), instil
5t. Strong attachment or adherence; partial- gastromith, engastrimuth ; < Gr. eyyaaTpi/ivdoc, by birth, implant, produce in: see ingenious,
ity; bias; partizanship. a ventriloquist, generally used of women who and cf. genius.] It. Innate or natural ability;
The opportunity of so fit a messenger, and my deep en- delivered oracles by Ventriloquy, < ev yaaTpi, ingenuity; craft; skill.
gagement of affection to thee, makes me write at this time. in the belly {iv, in ; yaarpi, dat. of yaari/p, akin But consydreth well, that I ne usurpe not to have found-
Winthrop, Hist. New England, I. 437.
to L. venter, belly), +
/ivBoc, speech. See myth.] en this werke of my labour or of myne engin.
This may he obvious to any who impartially, and without A ventriloquist.
Chaucer, Astrolabe, Pref.
engagement, is at pains to examine. Swi/t. Virgil won the bays.
So, all incenst, the pale engastromith And past them all for deep engine, and made them all to
6. Occupation ; employment of the attention (Rul'd by the furious spirit he's haunted with) gaze
aSair of business. Speaks in his womb. Upon the books he made. Churchyard.
Play, either by our too long or too constant engagement Sylvester, tr. of Du Bartas's Weeks, ii., The Imposture.
Such also as made most of their workes by translation
in it, becomes like an employment or profession, liogers, out of the Latine and French toung, <fe few or none of their
engender (en-jen'd6r), V. [Formerly also in-
7. In mach., the act or state of meshing toge- gender ; < ME. engendren, < OF. engendrer, F. owne engine. Puttenham, Arte of Eng. Poesie, p. 68.
ther and acting upon each other as, the engage- :
engendrer =
Pr. engenrar, engendrar Sp. Pg. = He does 't by engine and devices, he I
—
ment of geared wheels. 8. A combat between engendrar =
It. ingenerare, < L. ingenerare, be-
B. Jonson, Devil is an Ass, ii. 1.
armies or fleets; a fight ; a conflict; a battle. get, < in, in, -I- generare, beget, produce, gener- 2t. An artful device or contrivance ; a skilful-
The showr of Arrows and Darts overpass't, both Battels ate: see getierate and gender.] I, trans. 1. To ly devised plan or method ; a subtle artifice.
attack'd each other with a close and terrible ingagement. Therefore this craftie engine he did frame.
Milton, Hist. Eng., v.
breed; beget; generate.
Against his praise to stirre up enmitye.
All full of expectation ol the fleete's engagement, but it Thus, delves made, on hem shall weete and heete. Spenser, F. Q., II. i. 2a
is not yet. Pepys, Diary, II. 418. Thai two dooth all engendre grapes greete. The edict of the emperor Julianus . . . was esteemed
Palladius, Husbondrie (E. E. T. S.), p. 44.
Our army, led by valiant Torrismond. and accounted a pernicious engine and machination
. . .
Is now in hot engagement with the Moors. Dryden. Hence — 2. To produce; cause to exist ; bring against the Christian faith.
Bacon, Advancement of Learning, i. 69.
To recite at this time the circumstances of the Ingage- forth cause excite as, intemperance engen-
; ; :
ment at Brandywine, whicli have i)een bandied about in ders disease ; angry words engender strife. Imust visit Contarino upon that ;
all the Newspapers, would be totally unnecessary. Depends an engine shall weigh up my losses.
Washington, to Col. Saui'l Washington, N. A, Rev., This bastard love ia engendered betwixt lust and idle- Were they sunk low as hell.
(CXUII. 480. ness. Sir P. Sidney. Webster, Devil's Law-Case, U. i.
! : —
;: —
Oenerydee (E. E. T. S.), L 2887. ppr. engining. [< ME. enginen, engynen, con- Cl'Vil engineering, that branch of engineering which
relates to the construction or care of roads, bridges, rail-
The sword, the arrow, the gun, with many terrible en- trive, deceive, torture, < OF. engignier, engi-
roads, canals, amu'ducts, hariiors, drainage-works, etc.
gines of death, will be well employed. RaUigk, Eisays- gner, engenier, engenhier, contrive, invent, de- See ((.(•(iicni.— Hydraulic
Electrical engineering.
O most small fault, ceive, intrigue, etc., = Pr. enginhar OSp. cn- = engineering, see h;i'lrniili<\~ Mechanical or dynam-
How ugly didst thou In Cordelia show
Which, like an engine, wrench'd my frame of nature
gefiar, 8p. ingeniar = Pg. engenhar It. inge-= ic engineering, tliat braneli «hieli relates strictly to
machinery, sm-fi as steam-engines, machine-tools, mill-
gnare, deceive, dupe, etc., < ML. ingeniare, con-
I'rom the flx'd place. Sheik., Lear, i. 4. work, etc.— Military engineering, that branch which
trive, attack with engines, dep. in^eniari, in- relates to the construction and maintenance of fortifica-
But that two-handed engine at the door
Stands ready to smite once, and smite no more. trigue, deceive, < L. ingenium, genius, inven- tions, and all buildings necessary in military jiosts, and
MiUon, Lycidas, 1. 130. tion, LL. an engine: see engine, n.] If. To includes a thorough knowleilge of every point relative to
the attack and defense of places. The science also em-
Be takes the gift with reverence, and extends contrive.
braces the Burveying of a country for the various opera-
The little tngint [adaaonl on his fingers' ends. And now shal Lucifer leue it thowgh hym loth thinke tions of war—
Mining engineering, tliat branch which
Pope, B. of the L., Hi. 1S2.
relates to all the operations involv'ed in selecting, testing,
For Oygas the geaunt with a gynne engyned
More particulariy —
(e) A skilfully contrived mechanism To breke and to bete doune that ben agelnes lesus. opening, and working mines.— Naval or marine engi-
or machine, the parts of which roix-ur in prmtucing an in- Pier* Plowman (BX xviil. 250. neering, tliat lirancil which relates to tlie construction
tended effect ; a machine for applying any of the mechani- and management of engines for the propulsion of steam-
cal or physical powers to effect a iiarticular purpose; es- 2t. To assault with engines of war. Davies. aillls.
pecially, a self-contained, self-moving nu'chanism for the Infldels, profane and professed enemies to engine and engineership (en-ji-ner'ship), n. [< engineer
cjnvctslon of energy Into useful work as, a hydraulic en-
gine fur utilizing the preasnre of water ; a steam-, gas-, or
:
batter our walls. .Rci'. T. Adam*, Works, I. 29. -sltip.'] +
The post of engineer. [Rare.]
air rn^^rn^. in which the elastic force of steam, gaa, or air 3t. To torture by means of an engine ; rack. His nephew, David Alan Stevenson, joined with him at
Is utilized ; a f^T^-engine ; stationary or locomotive en- the time of his death in the engineership, is the sixth of the
gine*. In popular ainoliite use, the word generally has The mynistres of that toun family who has held, successively or conjointly, that office.
reference to a locomotive engine. Bee these wordi. Han hent the cartere and so sore him pyned. II. L. Steveneon, in Contemporary Rev,, LI. 790.
And eek the hostiller so sore engyned,
In mechanicals, the direction how to frame an Instrn- lliat they biknewe hir wikkednea anoon. engine-house (en'jin-hous), n. A building for
ment or engine, Is not the same with the manner of setting Chaucer, Nun's Priest's Tale, L 240. the accommodation of an engine or engines.
It on work. Bacon, Advancement of Learning, tL 278.
4. To furnish with an engine or engines : as, Boilers, dynamos, &ndengi7te-hou*e must all be arranged
Some cat the pipes, and some the engine* play. Elect. Bev., XXII. 243.
the vessel was built on the Clyde and engined for that
size.
And some, more bold, mount ladders to the lire.
Dryden. at Greenwich. engine-lathe (en'jin-laTH), n. large form of A
As the barometric oaclllations are due to solar nuliation. engine-bearer (en'jin-bSr'fer), n. In ghip- lathe employed for the principal turning-work
It follows that the earth and sun together constitute a huHding, one of the sleepers or pieces of tim- of a machine-shop.
thermodynamic engine.
Thmntnn arul Tail, Nat. Phil., | 8S0. ber in a steamer placed between the keelson engineman (en'jin -man), M.; pi. enginemen
Agricultural, ammonlacaL annular, assistant, at-
and the boilers of the steam-engine, to form a (-men). man who manages an engine, as in A
mospberlc engine. See the adjwtivi «. Balance- proper seat for the boilers and machinery. steamers, steam-cars, manufactories, etc.
wheel engine. *. /..i/ffjie«.iM«W.— Binary engine. '<"•
I-
engine-counter (en'jin-koun't6r), n. A
regis- engine-plane (en'jin-plan), ». In coal-mining,
hhirin/. - Blsulphld-of-ortKni engine, nn engine uning
tering device for recording or counting the ail underground way over which the coal is con-
the vapor of bi.4ulphi9 of carlxm as a motive agent The
liquid lioils at 1 10° K., and at the usual temperature of ex-
movements of engines or machinery ; a speed- veyed by means of an endless chain or rope
haust-steam will give a pressure of sixty-five pounds to the indicator. See speed^eeorder. worked by an engine.
square Inch. The vapor in such engines Is condensed after engined (en'jind), a. Same as engine-turned. enginert (en'ji-nfer), n. [Also ingener; earlier
passing through the cylinder, and retomcd to the boiler
engine-dri'Ver (en'jin-dn'vfer), «. One who form of enr/iHecr : see engineer.l 1. An engi-
to lie converted again into vapor It can be thus used con-
dnves or manages an engine; especially, one neer; one who manages a military engine.
;
any yiolnl of tlie ir:ivel of the car.— Bmpty engine. See dore and having charge of the Bureau of Steam Engineer- 2. Engines collectively; mechanism; ma-
em/rfi/. Ether-engine, a machine similar tothe steam- ing at the Navy Depariment; chief engineers, ranking,
according to length of service, with lientenant-comniand-
chinery; especially, artillery; instruments of
engin*-. in wliirh tli.- v;iiK>r of ether Issubstitnted for steam.
— Geared engine, ;in enL'inc which actuates the driven ers, commanders, or captains pajtued ojtrijitant entrineern,
;
war.
nia^.-hiner) tlii<<!i.;li tli' i'lr.-rvention of gearing.— Half- officers who have passed their examination for chief en- Not distant far with heavy pace the foe
beam engine, n Kteiim eniriric haring a beam so arranged gineer, and who rank with lieutenants and a**i*tani en-
; Approaching, gross and huge, in hollow cube
a to be moved about a pivot at one end by the action of gineer*, who rank with ensigns or Iteutonauts. Trailing his devilish enginery. Milton, P. L.,vi 5SS,
; ! ! ! —;
That beth of Engistes Soones. merce contains a majority of words of foreign origin, chief-
Those beams, by enginoits art, made often to mount and ly Latin or Greek, coming in great part through the Ro-
spread like a golden and glorious canopy over the deified Arthur (ed. Fumivall), 1. 521.
mance tongues, and of these chiefly through French. The
persons that are placed under it. And thanne ther Remayned in the shippe iiij Englyssk languages from which the next greatest contributions have
Middleton, Triumphs of Integrity. prestis moo. Torkington, Diarie of Eng. Travell, p. 56. been received are the Scandinavian (Icelandic, Swedish,
That's the mark of all their enginous drifts. Once more unto the breach, dear friends, once more Danish, Norwegian), the Low German (Dutch, Flemish,
To wound my patience. Or close the wall up with our English dead I etc.), Celtic, Hebrew, Persian, Arabic, Hindustani, Turk-
B. Joiuon, Cynthia's Bevels, iii. 2. Shak., Hen. V., iii. 1. ish, Malay, Chinese, American Indian, etc. The words
pret. and pp. engirt or O the roast beef of Old England derived from the more remote languages are, however, in
engird (en-gferd'), V. t. ;
!
gleymen, smear: see glaim.] I. trans. 1. To cal use. Originally applied to the language of the Angles, names (draw, follow, massi, etc.), the word English is gen-
besmear. it came in time to be the general designation of the aggre- erally used only when the ball glances after Impact in a
The gorre [gore] guschez owte at ones gate of slightly differing Low German dialects, Anglian direction more or less sharply angular from the object-
and Saxon, which was recognized as tlie national tongue ball or cushion. |U. S.]— Pidgin English. See PtdjTin.
That alle englaymei the gresse, one grounde ther he
MorU Arthure (E. E. T. S.), 1. 1181. of the Teutonic Invaders of Britain. This tongue, now JS'n(7ii«A.— Sandal- wood English, see the extract
•tandez!
; ;:
[In the South-Sea islands] hy means of a very singular make gloomy; surround with gloom. [Rare.] jaws of a serpent, or the like, which is swallowing it.
jargon . . . known as saiuial-wood J^tujlish^ or the* ^heche engrafft, engraffmentf . Obsolete forms of in-
de mer lingo." Pop. Sci. Mo., XXX. 200. Is this the result for the attainment of which the gym-
nasium remorselessly englo&ms the life of the German graft, inyraftment.
me king's (or queen's) TtngHah idiomatic or correct boy ? Pop. Sci. Mo., XIII. 635. engraft, engraftation, etc. See ingraft, etc.
English.
Here will be an old abming of God's patience and the engluet (en-glo'), v. t. [< ME. engluer, < OF. engrail (en-gral'), V. [Also ingrail; < F. engrS-
Hnga EnglUh. Shak., M. W. of \V., i. 4. engluer; < en-l + glue.] To glue ; join or close ler, engrail, < en- +
grile, hail: see grail^.] I.
fast, as with glue.
trans. If. To variegate ; spot, as with hail.
Enfdish (ing'gUsh), f. [< English, n.] I. trans. A cauldron new engrail'd with twenty hewes.
iTTo translate into the English language ren- ; Whan he sawe, and redie fonde
This coffre made, and well englued. Chapman, Iliad, p. 325.
der in English. [Often without a capital.]
Qower, Conf. Amant, viii. 2. To make serrate ;
give an indented outline
Often he woulde engtyshe his matters out of the Latlne to. [Archaic]
or Greeke vpou the sodeyne. englutt (en-gluf), V. t. [Formerly also inglut;
A>cham, The Scholemaster, p. 7. < F. engloutir = Pr. englotir =
OSp. englutir = Over hills with peaky tops engrail'd.
Tennyson, Palace of Art.
Those gracious Acts whereof so frequently hee maltes It. inghiottire, < ML. inglutire, swallow, < L. in,
mention may be englUh'd more properly Acts of feare and in, -I- glutire (> F. gloutir, etc.), swallow: see n. intrans. To form an edg-
dissimulation against his mind and conscience, e»-l and glut.] 1. To swallow or gulp down. ing or border run in a waving
;
2. To furnish with English speech. [Rare.] Being once englutted with vanity, he will straightway cut into concave semicircular
Even a poor scantily -Englished Frenchman, who wasted loath all learning. Ascham, The Scholemaster. indents said of a line and also
:
time in trying to ask how long the cars stopped, . , made a Bend En-
.
engobe (en-gob'), n. [Origin not obvious.] .Any of the bearing, such as a fesse, Ardent,
a good dinner in spite of himself. grailed Gules.
IlowelU, Their Wedding Journey. earthy whit* or cream-colored paste used as a bordure, or the like, whose edge
slip in coating naturally colored pottery, in or- is broken in this way: as, a bordure engrailed.
3t. To express in 8X)eech; give an account of. Also engresU.
der to mask or tone down its coarser and less
A vain-glorious knight, over-engtuhing his travels. agreeable tint. Polwheel beareth a saltier engrail'd.
B. Jonaon, Every Man out of his Humour, Pref.
R. Carew, Survey of Cornwall.
The red or brown ware was coated with a thin coating
4. In hiUiards, to cause to twist or spin and to of white clay called an engobe or slip. engrailing (en-gra'ling), n. [Verbal n. of en-
assume a more or less sharply angular direction ft'heatley and Detamotte, Art Worlt in Earthenware, p. 22. grail, r. ] An ornament consisting of a broken or
after impact: as, he Englished his ball too The true Naukratian [ware], coated with a creamy white indented lino or band. Also written ingrailing.
much. [U. 8.] engobe, on which the decoration is laid in black or orange. engrailment (en-gral'ment), n.
[< engrail +
n. intrans. In billiards, to impart a twisting J. P. Taylor, AndoverEev., VII. 447.
-mcnt.] 1. A
ring of dots round the edge of a
or spinning motion to the cue-ball : as, I Eng- engoldt (en-gold'), V. t. [ME. engolden (tr. L. medal. 2. In her., the state of being engrail-—
hshfd just right. [II. 8.] inaurare); < en-1 gold.] +
To cover or adorn ed ; indentation in curved lines.
Engllshable (ing'glish-a-bl), a. [< English with gold. + Wyclif, Rev. xvii. 4 (Oxf.). Also written ingrailment.
-oEle.'] Capable oi being rendered in laiglish. engomphosis (en-gom-fo'sis), «. [NL., < Gr. engrain, engrainer. See ingrain, ingrainer.
Imp. Diet. <r, in, -1- -)U[i(^, a nail, tooth, -osis.] +
8ame engrapplet (en-grap'l), v. i. [< e»-l -1- grapple.]
Englisher (ing'glish-^r), n. An Englishman. as gomphosis. To gi'apple ; struggle at close quarters.
[Rare.] engbreH (en-gor'), v. t.\ pret. and pp. engored, There shall young Hotspur, with a fury led,
William the Bastard could scarce have found the hardy ppr. engoring. [< e»-l gore^.] + To make Engrapple with tliy son, as fierce as he,
Engliihert so easy a conqnest •* Walter the Well-Irani gory. Davies. Daniel, Civil Wars, iv.
may And these eunuch Romans. Buluxr, Rienzi, p. 138.
A most unmaidy noise was made with those he put to engraspt (en-grisp'), I'. *. [< e«-i grasj).] +
Englislimail (ing'glish-man), n. ;
pi. English- sword. To seize with a grasping hold; hold fast by in-
nun (-men). [< AlE. Englischman, Eugliscman, Of groans and outcries. The flood blush'd to be so much closing or embracing gi"ip.
;
< AS. Knglisc man (mon) (rare) (= D. Engelsch- engor'd
man = Ban. Engelskmand Sw. Engelskman), With such base souls.
= Chapman, Iliad, xii. 22, So both together flers engrasped bee,
Whyles Guyon standing by their uncouth strife does see.
as two words: Bee English a,jti man.'] 1. A
man engored (en-gor'), v. t. [< en-i -I- gore^.] 1. Spenser, F. Q., II. v. 20.
who was bom in or is a citizen of England To pierce ; gore ; wound. Engraulidse (en-grft'li-de), n.pl. Same as En-
in a broad sense, a man of the English race Lo where beyond he lyeth languishing,
! grauliilida:
who preserves his distinctive racial character, Deadly engored of a great wllde Bore. engranlidid (en-grft'li-did), n. fish of the A
wherever he resides. Spenser, F. Q., III. L 38.
family Kiigraulididw.
Where'er I wander, boast of this I can.
2. To infuriate.
Engraulididse (en-grft-lid'i-de), n.pl. [NL., <
Though banish 'd, yet a tme.bom Englishman. As salvage Bull, whom two fierce mastlves bayt, Engraiiliv -i<l(V.] +
family of malaeoptery- A
Shak., Rich. II., L a. When rancour doth with rage him once engore.
Forgets with wary warde them to awayt. gian fishes, typified by the genus Engraulis; the
Then presently again prepare themselvet to sing anchovies: a synonym of IStolephorida; (which
Spenser, F. Q., II. vIIL 42.
The sundry foreign Fields the Englishtnen had fought.
Drayton, Folyolblon, iv. 443. engorge (en-g6rj'), v.; pret. and pp. engorged, see). Al'^o Engraulida: See cut under anc/iOJ'y.
2. An English ship. j)pr. engorging. [Formerly also ingorge; \ F. Engraulina (en-gra-li'na), n. pi. [NL., < En-
He Indicated the lumping steamer that lay among the engorger (= Pr. engorgar, engorjar It. in-
graulis
= -ina.] +
In Giliither's classification of
fishes, the first group of Clupcida: They are char-
sailing-sbipa. 8he wasnotanfn^fuAnum, tbonghlremlljr
forget the nationality of the oolonr she Hew at the peak.
gorgare, ingorgiare), < en- +
gorge, the throat
a<;teri/,ed by liaving the mouth very wide and lateral the ;
W. C. RustU, A Strange Voyage, ir. aee gorge.] I. trans. If. To swallow; devour; intermaxillary very small and th-ndy united to the maxil-
gorge ; properly, to swallow with greediness lary, whiell is elongate, and scarcely protractile and the
EnglishneSS (mg'glish-nes), n. [< English +
or in large quantities. upi)er jaw projecting. The group is the same as the fam-
;
3. The copy of an —
ing worthy of the name from a metal plate was produced Cf. engredge and aggrieve,"] To grieve; pain.
instrument or writing made in large fair char-
by Maso Finignerra, a goldsmith of Florence, in 1452. For no thyng engreveth me. Bom. of the Base, 1. 3444.
yit
Relief-engraving on wood was, however, in use among the acters.
Aches, and hurts, and corns do engrieve either towards
Orientals at a far earlier period. In engraving on metal Which clause, being approved by all parties, was in the
the lines or murks which are to appear on the paper are rain or towards frost. Bacon, Nat. Hist. king's presence entered in the bill that his majesty had
sunk into the plate, and before being printed frtmi are filled engross (en-gros'), V. t. [Formerly also ingross; signed ; and being afterwards added to the engrossment,
with ink, the rest of tlie surface being cleaned ijefore tlie was again thus reformed. Clarendon, Life,
< ME, cngrossen, write large, < OF. engrossir, it II. 496.
impression is taken. On a block of wood the lines for
impression are left prominent, the blank parts being cut engroisser, engrossier, engroissier Sp. engrosar = 4. The
state of being engrossed or entirely
away, so that the wooden block serves as a type. Copper = Pg. engrossar =
It. ingrossare, < ML. ingros- occupied about something, to the exclusion of
and steel plates are printed from separately on a press spe- sare, make large, write large, engross, ingros- other things; appropriation; absorption.
cially adapted for this use wooden blocks, on the ordi-
;
sari, become large, < L. in- 4- LL. grossus, thick,
nary printing-press, commonly along with the accompany- In the engrossment of her own ardent and devoted love.
ing text The W(X)d generally used for fine engraving is gross, ML. also large : see gross.'] If. To make Bulvjer.
box, and the metals commonly employed by engravers are
copper and steel. Different methods or styles of engrav-
largfe or larger ; make additions to
increase in engrossure (en-gros'ur), n. [< engross
; -«re.] +
bulk or quantity. Same as engrossment, 4.
ing on steel or copper are known as aquatint, etching,
mezzotint, stipple, line-engraving, etc. For this they have engrossed and pil'd up Engrossure in his work. Missionary Rev., IX. 278.
The canker'd heaps of strange-achieved gold.
In t&c&\m\\Q engraving, .the drawing is made upon
. .
Shah, 2 Hen. IV., iv. 4.
enguardt (en-gard'), v, t [< OF. engarder, <
the wood with a pen or the point of a brush, generally by
another person, and all that the engraver does is just to Not sleeping, to engross his idle body. en- + garder, guard see en-^ and guard,]
: To
hollow all the little areas of wood that are left inkless. But praymg, to enrich his watchful soul. guard; defend.
P. G. Hamerton, Graphic Arts, p. 413. Shak., Rich. HI., iii. 7. A hundred knights ! Yes, that on every dream.
2\. To make thick or gross thicken. Each buz, each fancy, each complaint, dislike,
3. That which is engraved, or produced by en- ;
He may enguard his dotage with their powers,
graving; an engraved representation, or an The waves thereof so slow and sluggish were, And hold our lives in mercy.
4. Shak., Lear, i.
incised plate or block intended to be printed Engrost with mud. Spenser, F. Q., II. vi. 46.
enguicll6 (on-ge-sha')T «• [F., < OF. engtdche, <
from: as, an engraving on a monument or a 3. To take in the gross or in bulk; take the
whole of; get sole possession of; absorb com- In /ier., having
en- +
gtiiche^ a handle of a shield, buckler, etc.]
watch-ease ; a steel or a wood engraving. a rim around the mouth: said
With the work of an engraver in stone, like the en- pletely: with or without a??.
of a hunting-horn used as a bearing, and used
gravings of a signet, shalt thou engrave the two stones Cato misliking greatly the engrossing of offices in
with the name of the children of Israel.
. . ,
only when the rim is of a different tincture from
Ex. xxviii, 11. Rome that one man should haue many at once.
Puitenham, Arte of Eng. Poesie, p. 174. the rest of the horn.
4. An impression taken from an engraved
engulf, ingulf (en-, in-gulf '), v. t. [< OF, e7i-
plate or block; a print —
AnaglyptograpMc en-
graving, anastatic engraving. Hee the adjectives.—
If thou engrossest all the griefs as thine,
Thou robb'st me of a moiety. golfcr, engulf (= Sp. Pg. engolfar, get into
ureau of Engraving and Printing. See bureau.— Shak., All's Well, iii. 2. narrow sea-room, refi. plunge into a business,
Chalk engraving, a form of stipple engraving used to Now with my friend I desire not to share or participate, It. inqolfare, engulf), < L. in = ML. golftis, +
imitate dr:i,winL,'-s macie in chalk. The grain of the chalk but to engross his sorrows. guJfiis (6F. golfe, etc.), gulf: see gulf.] 1. To
drawing is reproduceil by irregular dots of different forms Sir T. Brounie, Religio Medici, ii. 5.
and sizes.— Copperplate engraving, the art of engrav-
swallow up in or as in a gulf or whirlpool;
These negroes. In fact, like the monks of the dark ages,
ing on prepared plates of copper for pnnting. Totheplate engross all the knowledge of the place, being in-
overwhelm by swallowing or submerging.
. . .
is given a surface wiiich is perfectly plane and highly p<d- finitely more adventurous and more knowing than their You begin to believe that the hat was invented for the
ished. It next heated sufficiently to melt wax, with
is masters. Irving, Knickerbocker, p. 99. sole purpose of imndfing coppers, and that its highest
which it is then rubbed over, so that when cooled it is
covered with a white skin, to which the design or drawing Specifically —
4. To monopolize the supply of,
type is the great Triregno itself, into which the pence of
Teter rattle. Lowell, Fireside Travels, p. 310.
is transferred. The engraver, with a steel point, follows or the supplies in get entire possession or con-
the lines of the drawing, pressing lightly so as to penetrate
;
2. To cast into or as into a gulf.
trol of, for the purpose of raising prices and
through the wax and line faintly the copper surface be- we adjoin to the lords, whether they prevail or not,
neath. The wax is then melted off, the surface cleaned, enhancing profits as, to engross the importa- weIfcn^M^f
:
ourselves into assured danger. Hayivard.
and the engraving is proceeded with, a burin or graver tions of tea ; to engross the market for wheat.
being used to cut the lines, a scraper to remove the slight Some by engrossing of looms into their hands, and let- engulfment, ingulfment (en-, in-gulf 'ment), w.
bur raised by the burin, and a burnisher to soften or tone ting them out at such unreasonable rents. l< engulf] ingulf, -ment,] The act of engulf- +
down the lines and remove scratches. Tlie engraver uses Act of Philip and Mary, quoted in English Gilds ing, or the state of being engulfed.
also a woolen rubl)er and a little olive-oil to clean the face [(E. E. T. S.), Int., p. clxiii.
of the plat«, in order to render the condition of his work The formation of the crevasses was violent, accompanied
plainly visible and this rubber serves also to polish tiff
;
What your people had you haue ingrossed, forbidding l)y an explosive noise and, where they traversed villages, ;
the burs.— FaCSlnille engraving, engraving on wood, them our trade. escajie from ingulfment was by no means easy.
in which every line is eitluT drawn on the block or else Quoted in Capt. John Smith's True Travels, I. 207. Science, V. 351.
photographed from pen or pencil drawing in reduced size, 6. To occupy wholly take up or employ en- engynt, engynef, n. Obsolete variants oi engine.
;
the work of the engraver being to remove the wood from
between these lines. This is the earliest method of wood-
the exclusion of other things as, busi- Engyscllistse (en-jis-kis'te), n. pi, [KL., < Gr.
tirely, to :
engraving, and is called facdrnile in contradistinction to ness engrosses his attention or thoughts to be eyyvg, near (with ref. to naiTowness), + ax^^'''^*
;
tint engraving, in which, the drawing being in wash, engrossed in study. verbal adj. of cxi^^tv, cleave.] In GUnther's
;; :
prominent; and the teeth are all lilunt, 32 in all, but there
Murirnidw. France useth to enharden one with confidence
. . are no median lower incisors. There is but one living
engyscope (en'ji-skop), ». [Less prop, engi- for the gentry of France have a kind of loose becoming genus, Eohydris. Also Enhydrina.
boldness. Howell, Foreign Travel, p. 11)2. Enhydris (eu'M-dris), ».
scope ; < Gr. eyyii, near (with ref . to narrow- [NL., < Gr. IvvSpic,
ness), +
auKTclv, view.] kind of reflecting A enharmonic, enharmonical (en-har-mon'ik, an otter, < cvvdpo^, in water, living in water:
microscope. -i-kal), a. [= F. enharmonique Sp. enar- = see enhydrotis.'\ 1. A
genus of reptiles. 2. —
enhabilet, v. An obsolete form of enable. mdnico =
Pg. enharmonieo It. enarmonico, < = The typical genus of sea-otters of the subfam-
enhabitt (en-hab'it), v. t. See inhabit. Gr. ivapftoviKoq, usually ivapfiAvto^, in accord or ily Enhydrinx. The grinding-teeth are of peculiar
enhablet, r. t. An obsolete form of enable. harmony, < hv, in, -t- dp/iovia, harmony: see har- shape, without any trenchant edges or acute cusps, all
being bluntly tubercular on the crowns, and rounded off
enhalo (en-ha'lo), r. t. [< en-l + halo."] To mony, harmonic.^ In Gr. music, pertaining 1. in contour. The palms of the fore feet are naked, with
surround with a halo or glory. [Rare.] to that genus or scale that is distinguished from
Her captain still lords it over our memories, the greatest the diatonic and the chromatic by the use of in-
sailor that ever sailed the seas, and we should not look at
Sir John Cranlclin himself with such admiring Interest tm
tervals of less than a semitone. 2. In mod. —
music: (a) Pertaining to a scale or an instru-
that with which we enhaloed some larger boy who had
made a vuyaye iii her [the sloop Harvard]. ment using smaller intervals than a semitone.
Loufell, Fireside Travels, p. 41. (6) Pertaining to a use of notes which, though
enhalset (en-hals'), r. <. l<en-l + halse.} To differing in name and in position on the staff,
clasp round the neck ; embrace. refer on instruments
The other me enhaljie.
of intonation,
fixed and
With welcome now welcome out of like the
pianoforte,
cosin, Wales.
Mir. /or Magt., p. 406. to identical keys or
^ '"'
(en-bins'), r. ; pret. and pp. enhanced, tones; thus (a) are enharmonieally distinct,
enhance
but practically identical Enharmonic change
(£^
ppr. enhancing. [Formerly also inhance; early
or modulation, a change of