— 1 . — "

nuzl 1309

nuz'l, r. Nazzle. Phil. Soc. Nyc'^ll-or'nls, w. (t. g.)-'nyc^ti-or'ni-thin(e, a. & Nym-phse'a, nim-ft'a or -fe'a, n. Bot. 1. A genus nns'zert nuz'sr. n. [E. Ind.] A present made to a superior. n.— ?iiyc'^ti-pitb''e-cl'uie, "- />' Mam. A subfamily of of aquatic of tlie water-lily family {Nymphse- ceboldmonkeys with a non-prehensile tail and vertical inci- nuz'xle, nuzl, r. [Prov. or Obe.] I. /. 1. To root afc«) — the spatter-docks or yellow water-lilies- long sors; squirrel -monkey 8 and douroucoulls. See lllus. under up. as a h(^. 2. To rub the nose against. known as Xvphar. having leaves with a deep sinus at iMJUROicouLi. Nyc^ti-pi-lhc'cU8, n. (t. g.) nyc"- nuzzling — Some tweatj whal««boaU were a A&nd-bank. ti-pith'e*cin(e, a. & «.— Nyc"ti-8au'rR, n. pi. The the back, and small yellow unattractive flowers. 2. A K1PU.V0 Light that Faileii ch. 2, p. 17. [l. CO.] Gecrtmidm as a suborder.— nyc^ti-sau'ri-an. a. & «.— former kindred genus, the white water-lilies, now 3. To put a ring tbroogh the nose of. 4. To fondle. nyc'li-tro-uiMin, ». The so-called sleep of plants; adaily called Castalia. [L., < Gr. nympkaiay water-lily, < Huffged ID the armes peri'xllcity or niovenient of certain leaves, from st^nsitlve- nymph^., nymph.] nuzzled twixt the breasU of bappineM. ness to variations in the intensity of light, causing them And Nym''pliaB-a'ce-ae, Dim'fg-g'se-t or-g'ce-e, n. />i. Bot. Makston ^n(onto'« Revenue prol., 1. 16. to change their positions. They close at night and expand An order of aquatic, i>erennial, — In the daylight.— nyc^ti-trop'ic, (/.— uyc'to-phile, n. polypetalous herbs I. 1. To root in the earth, as a hog. II. A plecotine vespertillonold bat (genus Syitophilus) with a the water-lily family — with a thick horizontal rootstock, There are manv dens of infamf into which men |fo, where they rudimentary nose-leaf, as the Australian N. timorentiK.— long-petioled, mainly peltate, floating or submersed nuzzle the mud. H. W. Brecher Lectures to Young Men in nyc''lo-plio'ni-a, «. P>ithol. Vocal ability to speak only leaves, and large solitary flowers. It embraces 3 subor- lect. X. p. 198. [w. L. A CO.] during iilghl'tinie.— nyc'^to-ty-phlo'siM. n. Aitfiol. A ders, 8 genera, and about 35 species, living in fresh wa- 2. To rub anything with the nose. 3. To go with the slate of tlie organs of vision in which the eye sees by the ter in all parts of the world. [< Nympil«a.] Doae toward the ground, tike swine. 4. To nestle. 5. sunlight, but not after sunset nor by artificial light; noc- — iiyiii^'pliie-a'ceous, a. To loiter; idle. [< nose, n.\ confused in some senses turnal amaurosis; ulght-blindncss. nyni-pliiv'iiiii, nim-ft'um ar-fe'um, n. [-a, pl.'\ . and nestle.] nous'elt; Nyc^tn-gl-iia'ce-w, nic'ta-ji-ne'se-t or -gi-na'ce-C', n. 1 A with MCR-sE nours'let; shrine or sanctuary of the nymphs. These eventually nus'tle^. pi. Bot. An order of apetalous herbs, or rarefy ehrubs became magnificen't foundations, where it was usual to njrt* A contraction for nor for not T. or trees — the four*o'clocK family — having mainly oppo- celebrate marriages. . In ancient Roman villas, a room ny*an'da,ni-aa'da,/i. [Afr.] Cloth made from the baric of site, simple, entire leaves, and variously shaped clusters 2 or recess adorned with fountains, flowers, statues; a llg-tree (/Vcim Intttca). of flowers with a delicate tubular or funiielfonn petaloid and also, a monumental structure adorning a basin or reser- Through all thia Dpiaad reeion the tr«cs jrieJdinir b*rk«doth, or calyx. It embraces 8 tribes, i5 penera. and 120 epecies, Hifanda, are »o abandant that the people are all well clothed with voir for the digtribntion of water, as at the termination of niamly found in the tropics. Nyc"la-gln'l-a, n. (,t. g.) it, and care but littJe for our cloth. an aqueduct. [L., Gr. nymphaion, nytnpM., nymph.] i/njkf-), < < Joumaia ch. 7, p. [< Gr. nyx night.] Nye^ta-gln'e-a-'J. LivufOATOKB Last Nym-plial'l-die, nim-fal'i-dlw-de, H.)«. Entom. A 150. (H. Tft.] — nyc'^ta-sl-na'ceoiis, a.— nyo'ta-gIn(e, n. family of butterflies with the fore le^ reduced, middle ni-an'za, n. fAfr.] A A of the lour'o'clock family {Xyctaginacese). ny-an'za. lees bent forward, and caterpillars spinigerous. Nym- sheet of water; lake; marso; also, a nycterl-. Derived from Greek »i/^fen.'<., bat (< nyx, pna'IlM, /(. It. g.) [< Gr. nymphs, nymph.] river feeding a lake, ny-as'sa^. night): a combining form.— IVyc'^le-rl-bl'l-dip, n. pi. ~ lyni-pliarid, a. & 7j. — iiyin'ptia-lotd, a. a lake, Ent'/m. A family or puplparous'dlptera having a splder- A river of any importance fcedinif nym-plil'Us, nim-fai'tis or -ft'liSjW. Palhol. Inflam- becomes a Syanzoi a targe Imy becotnes llke aspect and no winKS, and parasitic on bats; bat-lice; mation of the nymphffi or the clitoris. [< nympha, 1.] a Sifanza; a small l^ke, or a greater, is bat-ticks. Nyc'^te-rib'Ua, «. (t. g.)— nyc"le-rib'i- known a« a Si/anza, or Kuweru. id( a. An.— nyc^te-rlVi-old, o.— \yc-ter'i-dn>, ". nymplio-, nymph-. Derived from Latin nympha., Stamlxt /n Darkest Africa toI. ii, ch. pi. Mam. The MegndermUla. Nyc'te-riii, n. (t. g.)— a nymph (see nymph): combining forms.- nym^pho- tS. p. JM. Is. -WtJ nyc'te-rld, n.— nyc'te-rin(e» «.— nyc'te-roid, «. & lep'sic* '/. Of or pertaining to nympholepBy, nyiii"- ny'atp«w'^« Dol'Q'pA'. n. An Indian n.— Nyc-ler'l-des, n. pi. Main. The Aiiimalivora. pho-lep'licj,— nyin'pho-lep"»y, n. lliare.] 1, A silkworm (Bombvx arracan^i»U). nyctt r^ To draw near.— nyet, a. & adv. Near. nyt. kind of ecstasy or frenzy, said to have taken possession of ny'aii*, n. An eyas. See niab. nye^t n. A brood, as of pheasants. one who looked upon a nymph In a spring or stream; hence, ny'afi ta-ran'sa. nalas ta-ran'gQ. nye*ti n. Same as say. a demoniac frenzy; a fonn of religious mania; ecstj^ay. 2. [E. Ind.] A tninipet*Bhaped musical nv-eu'tek, ni-en'tek, n. A small musteloid or weasel- Surg. Excision of the nymphw. nyin'^pho-lep''8i8t*^ Instrument of northwestern India, like carnivore {Helictis orientalis or H. mo8chata)y of nyni'pho-lpptf n. One affected with nyinpholepsy. plaveddu pairH) by placing the smaller eastern Asia ana the adjacent islands. The nt/tnjtholepts of Truth are profoundly interesting figures in the Tocal Playing the K^'as end agalri)>t throat over the nyl'gaa» n. Same as nilgau. the world's historv, but their lives are melancholy readingr- A. BlB- the cheeks nostrils, Taranga. cords, or on or nymT, vt. To steal: filch; take. nimt. UBLL Obiter Dicia, Truth»Uunting in first series, p. 117. [8. '86.] and moving them by strong breathing, Us ancient native nymf, «. Nymph. Phil. Soc. — nym^pho-nin'ni-n* ji. Pathol. A morbid and Insane name was upariga, and It Is called note^Jtute bjr Anglo-In- nitnf, inferior female divinity Bex unl desire in women. dians. nymph, ». 1. Myth. An nyiii'pbo*ina^nyt>— Nym"- forest, spring, pho-na'ce-a« n. pi. Crunt. The P!/cnogotiiilea.— nym~ n. , Nice. Koullsb; weak. inbabiUng a grove, fountain, or mountain, nyce*. 1 l|, pbou'cuB* H. Pathol. A tumor of the nymphae.- — ny'ce-ieN n. 1. Nicety. 2* Folly. Djr'ce-teeti or even a lonely isie, as Circe and Calypso. Nymphs are Nym- ". pi. Cruftt. A family of pycnogonideans, ny'ne-le+, favorites of Zeua and Dlonysos, of , Hermes, and phon'i-dfCt especially those with chellfori, palpi, and false h'gs In both Byce'ly+, 'utc. Carefully. Pan, and are well disposed to mortals, to whom they act sexfs. S'ym'phon, h. (l. g.) ~ nym-phou'id, «. nyeh-the'me-ron, nicthrmfi-ren, n. The whole day as tutelary deities. See Dryad; Hamadryad; Muse; Nai> AD; Nkreid; Obkad. iiyiii'Dho-nuid, a.— nyiii-pliot'o-inyi n. Surg. The of ^ boars. [ < Gr. nychtMmerot^ of a dajr and night, operati4>ii of cutting away tbe uymphie. [Poet] Ueuce, attractive damsel. < nyx (nykt)^ night, -j- A^nwro, day.] 2. an maid; nyst. Is not. nist. nyct-, /Derived from Greek nyar (nyit^), night: cooi- And the lip of the nimph w» admire Nys'sa, nis'a, n. A small but widely scattered genus of nyett-, Vblning forms.— nye^la-lo'pM.n. Patfud. A Saems for ever adorn 'a with a smile. trees or shrubs of tiie dogwood family {('ornacae), with SBKXSTONE A Pastoral, Dtsaj^pofntment tt. i. nrrlo-. \ state of the visoal Kose in which the sight is alternate mainly entire leaves, and clusters of small green- bett«rln obscurity or at night than In daylight; formerly, 3. Bntom. (1) A pupa or chrj'salis. (2) In insects ish diceciously jwlygamous flowers. N. /fylvadca, of the day-bllndneas. Qight-bllndneM: now BTc'ta-lo^pyl.— with incomplete metamorphosis, the stage in which the eastern Unitttl States, is the tupelo, pepperidge, black- ayc^ta-lap'lr. a. Relating to or of the natin^ of day- wing-pads are first evident. (.3) A subimu^o or pscudi- gum, or sour-gum tree. [< L. Nysa, nurse of Bacchus, blindness.— aye^ia-loya* f». I-Lo'PES, p/.] Une who Is mago, as of an ephemerid. 4. One of various nympha- also name of several towns.] aflllcted with day-blindness.— Bi yc-tan'(lies« n. Hot. A nionotyplc genus of shrubs or trees of tbe family lid butterflies, as a purple or a fritillary. [< F. riymphe, Nyaf-Moii''l-du'. nis-sen'i-dl or -d6, n. jrf. Entom. A Gr. nymp/ii, bride. ( OUiicem). y. Arbor»trUU$ Is the tree-of-wulness or ulght- < L. nympha, < nymph, family of foHsorial hymenopters or digger-wasps having Jasmlne of eastern India.— Nrc'te-aicr^l-d»» n. pi. — nymph'al, a. 1. Nymphean. 2. Zool. Of or the prothora.\ contracted behind, fore wings with three Entom. A family of bombycldean moths with a slender pertaining to a njrmph or nymuha.— nym-plie'Hii. complete submarginal cells, marginal cell not appendicu- body and large wlnos. Nyc-ie'aie-ra. n. it. g.> — nyc"- rt. Of, pertaining to, or inhabited oy— Byr*tlbM-lii(e. a. * ». guently affecting miners and others working in a dim Nyr^'ll-t-eb'l-dtt* n. pi. Mam. Tbe .Vj/cUc«Mfue as a nym'pha, nim'fa. n. [ntk'ph^c, nim'ft or -fd, pi.] 1 fight and a stm)i)ing position. [< Gr. nystaginog, drow- family.— Nyc'^ll-ce-bi'aie, n. pi. Mam. A subfamily Anat. One of the inner folds of the mucous membrane siness, nytitazd, nod in sleep.] of lemurlds, especially those with subeqtial llnitjs, moderate < of tbe female pudenda; the labia minora. 2. Zool. (1) untl, and rudimentary tail. Nyc'^il-ce^baa* n. (t. g.)— ny*u'la, nl-yli'la, w. An ichneumon {HerjyeMes nyiUa). be- nyr'^ll^e^lB(e.ci.*n~Nyc^ti-«r^al-thrnie.n.p'. Entofn. A nymph. (2). Conch. An impressed area ayx'ls, nlx'lfl, ;i. [Or.] surg. A woimd made by a sharp* Ornith. A subfamily of meropold birds with wings rounded. hind the umboDe« of a bivalve shelL [L.; see mtxi'U.] pointed Instrument; a puncture. O

In the older English and In dialects, as In tbe New England The history of the characters Is represented as follows: s whole^ home, etc., but In most words It has lost Its resonance O o <» e ^ and has the sound of o. 0, as in or»i, word, or has strength- ened Into e. A, or 0, as In of* /or, orer. Silent o Is wrongly O O S< O €c Oq Roman. Black Letter. Phil. Boc. Script. written in a few words: jeopard, leopard, people. as tt Is j)roll to and are rounded. A« 9. [OKS, O's. or (9k, 6z, /V. The seventeenth Ot [ negative categorical tongue Ifi ralwd higher, 5 shade* Into u, fl, as In faU, rfl/«, noting: (1) Logic. A particular letter (nineteenth sound) in the duelling Keform alpha- and. the llpfl (ioMlng to a buzz, Into ir; If the tongue Is proposition. (2) Mus. (a) In medieval music, tempus bet; in Bell's "Visible Speech," J: the sign of rounded lowrred. It chnnges Into A, • aa In n»r. nM, and. the llpa periectuih, or triple rhythm. (6 ) In modem music, a vowel-euund (low and back in the mouth), simple as in bflnx unrounded. Into u in/^heTy or, without reaonance. null. (3) Math. Zero or naught; called also a round O: Into u as In Jiun. rtot^ whai^ or prolonged as in nor, nauglU. sometimes used by the ancients for 11, and, with a dash A Tarent Speech root "a." taklUK various relatlona to Short « is often the rounding of an earlier a by an over it (()). for 11,000. (4) Vhem, Oxygen. arrrnt ami rauodlna. may ^pear aa any of these o sounds: adjacent labial or nasal (w, u < I, n): whfil, gait, qmility, " O', ( «. A descendant; a patronymic preilx in Irish names. H<> may root a.** And MDce "a" weakens atao Into a. e. 1 quantity, lon^ < lang. f It ise gn; Anglo-Baxon becomes Q In sound: htMtrne and horne, Imth alike pronounced hSs. off a. One; a single. .\ngIo-s«x'm V.'—. ^ ""Km - mOn. The diphthongs ol, sound as di: voice, boy; eu, o» P^^P- Of; oh; SR, one o'clock; o' the port side. [Abbr. This set ''. .'*.•} have only gradually been dis- »y % orfl: or u: tough. of ttF, o's.prepH.] tlngiilnh*fl iH«D alphabeU. In Sanskrit, root evir =au: loud, now, cough, . prefixed to an expression Whitney flnds the following percentages of tbe o O, 0, iuferj. 1 An exclamation u Is In Inflt ' ^ V which has Its Prof. the accent Into of address, as a sign of the vocative, or case of address, p«Tin| |<>ti«r, Nnt rMiirHiiiigsof uasin lehat^aUttn not dls- sounds in EngllMh literature- o, .08; O, 1.76; h, 2.59; A, l.r>4: iisetl especially eaniest scjlemn appeal or exhor- ttnguUbfvl In writing rnmi a as In rather. The sound of a el, .12. W. I). WiiirxKY OrienUtl and LinguiHtlc Studies in or lu In uf'i. irhitt fa tn»rit nt-Arpfto Q Ibiui tn A, Iwt Bs u stuuled second serieit, p. Zi4. [s. "14.] tation, or as a reverential expression in prayer to the I...... : '..'. A <><'>•)••'! t/, p. /-u- d'fl as In tcAal Capital O is from Greek, I>atin O < t'lirlier <> < Phc- Deity, to emphasize the feeling or passion conveyed by wen n- all denoted nlcian O (^ guttural sound), not t. . \* not n-cognlzed as stand- of the mouth in making the sound. phrase, being Joined to O by ard K:.,;...-;. ... .u.. , a.. ^ > :.u^: «j ambles. It occurs abundantly rounding an Interjectlonal or elliptical variant. aa = out; ell; IA s f«iffL |Q = future; e s k; cliarch; db =

oad 1310 oath

/w, if expressed by a substantive, or by that when expressed — oaktbeanty, ?». [Eng.] Ageometridnioth (.^mpMrfa- oars. 1. To stop rowing; hold the oars stationary In the In a subjimeilve tlause; as, Ofor rest and peace! O that sis vrodroitmria) whose caterpillar feeds upon the oak.— water. The usual command for this position is "Oars!" 2, a re- Hence, colloquially, to cease from labor; rest at ease.— the day would come '. oak«beelle, n. An elaterid beetle of Eucnemis or to 3. Same as oh. The forms O and oh are often used in- lated genus.— oak*fern, n. A polypod (Phegopteris or put iu one^s oar, to intrude remarks Into other people's discriminately. It seems, however, to be very generally con- p}lf/podium Dri/opteriJi) with a slender, delicate, smooth conversation; Intermeddle.— to ship oars, to place the position for ceded that the proper form In the vocative use is O. stipe and a light-green ternate blplnnatifld frond.- oak: oars In rowing.— to take the Inborinor filjr, n. A fig-shaped gall on the young growth of the white oar, to do the harder part of a task.— to toss or peak Betwttni the interjections (> and oh there exists an essential dif- oak, produced by a gall-fly (Cf/nips jorticorni^).— of!iUs oars, to raise the oars out of the rowlocks to a vertical ttanMoOf which is frequently neelected even by some of our best n. A small American toad i,Bi{/'o quercm) inhabit- position.- to trail oars, to allow the oars to trail along- wrttvn. The former is properlj' pretixed to an expressiou iu a froff, side of the boat or by the trailing-lines.- direct address; but the latter ou(;bt never to be so employed. O ing oak-openings, — oaktgall, n. A gall produced on an to unship shoald be used without the mark of exclamation immediutely after oak. See illus. under gall-fly.— oaksleatber, n. 1. oars, to take the oars out of the rowlocks or from be- tween the tliole-plns. it; bat oh, aometimee with and sometimes without it, a<.-coraintf to Oak-tanned leather. ^. A tough fungus-spawn that grows the coostroction and senae of the passa^ in which the word occurs. In fissures of old oaks and has the appearance of while kid — oar'less, a. Having no oars.— oars'man, n. John Wlisos Punctuation ch. 3, p. 160. [.a. s. b.] leather: sometimes used for spreading plasters on. — oake One who rows or is skilled in rowing. — oars'inan- luugs, n. A lichen {Stivta pulmonaceu); lungwort: for- AS. eSA $.— O dear I an exclanialory phrase ex- slttp, n. The art of rowing; skill in rowing.— oar'y, [< oh merly used medicinally.— oaksinanna, n. An exudation surprise, the form or use of an oar. pressive of disappointment, etc.— O dear nicl from the upper surface of the leaves of an oak {Quercus a. Having an intensified form of O dear.' manjifjeru) of Kurdistan.- oaksopenins, n. [Local, oar'age, Or'gj, n. Oare collectively. n. Same as wo\d: a cornipt form. oadt. U. S.] An open glade or thinly wooded space In a forest On this lake I lay in a little boat; ... its rudder and its oarage •'a-dal, O'Q-dal, ». [E. Ind.] An Indian tree (Sterctilia of oaks.— oakspest, Ji. An insect injurious to the oak; were my own unconscious will, and ... I floated as I list witii & viUoaa) of the cola-nut fftinily iStercuUucesB). Its inner speclflcally. In the United States, a phylloxera {Phyllox- furrowlesB keel, LUDLOW Hasheesh Eater ch. 3, p. 40. [H. '60.] bark Is made into rope, and in Goa and Canara baps for rice, era rileyi) which Injures oak-leaves.— oak^plum, «. A oard, a. Oared. Phil. Soc. are by stripping oflf the bark entire, after soak- etc.. made plum-shaped gall produced by a gall-fly Cynips quercuS' sewing ( oared, Ord, a. 1. Having oars for propulsion: gener- ing, from the trunk and larger branches and up at prunus), found on acorns of the black and the red oak.— the bottom. ally compounded with a numeral; as, an eight'Oarerf oo*'dhali;. oak:potRto, M. A potato-shaped gall on twigs of the oaf* Of, n. Originally, a misshapen child left in place boat. 2. Zool. (1) Having oar-like feet or swimming- white oak, produced by a gall-fly ( Cynipa quercus ' batatas) of a human chnd reputed stolen by fairies; a change- — oak:spaiiffle, n. A flattened, fungus-like gall pro- appendages; as, the wattH'-siirew or oared shrew (Croseo- ling; any deformed or foolish child ; a dolt; simpleton. duced on oak-leaves by a gall-fly iNeuroteriis lenticularis). pus ciliatus). (2) Totipalmate, as a bird's foot. — oakstaniied, a. In leather-making, tanned with an ex- oario-. Combining Mrs. BonihMe Newt . . . had been tatight by her husband that form of oarium.— o-a'ri-o-oele, Mr. Van BocMKnber^ was an oaf, but an onf unose noise was to be tract of oak-bark.— oak-tree* n. The oak.— oakiwart, 71. Ovarian hernia.— o-a^'ri-o-cy-e'sis, 7i. Obslet. Ova- liMened to with the utmost patience and respect. n. An oak-gall. rian pregnancy, — o-a"ri-on'ciis, n. An ovarian tumor. G. W. CUETIS Trumps ch. 32, p. 199. [h. 73.] And the pie with the long tongue — o-a"ri-o-par-ec'ta-ina, n. Enlargement of the [land willow-oak (Q. cinerea); d, scarlet oak (Q. coccinea); e, oak, to exclude visitors, as by closing the outer oaken AS.rts/, kiln.] cock'lei; ostt; oustj. coestBut-oak (Q. Prinus); white oak {Q. alba); g, an acorn or f, of a student's apartment: primarily English — n. building the scarlet oak {Q. coccinea); h, a simple male flower of the same. door univer- oasl'shouse", A for containing oasts, sity slang.— Turkey oak, in the United States, same or serving a purpose like that of an oast. There are about 300 species, some of which are mere as BARKEN SCRUB-OAK and Spanish oak; In Europe, Q. oat, ot, ?^ 1 . A cereal grass (A vena sativa), or its edible dirubs and others giant trees that in ancient times inspired Cerris, a large tree of southern Europe, yielding timber grain: usually in the pmral and collect- veneration. male flowers are la scaly valuable for turnery, cabinet-work, and building. Called The spikes (catkins), ively. It has a smooth culm or stem 2 the female bud-shaped, and the fruit, called the acorn, a also inossy-cup oakdMA MJaOisco/-o«A;.— upland willo'ivs to i feet high, and pedunculate spikelets, smooth nut having a tough thin shell, is partly enclosed Q. cinerea, a shrub or small tree of the South Atlan- oak, each with two pei-fect flowers, the lower In a scaly, saucer^like shell, called the ciipule or cup. The tic coast of the United States.— Q. Gar- western oak, usually awned. It has been long cultivated oak is of value in ship-building, in cabinets and house«work, ryana, a large tree of the Pacific coast, often called Cali- ] as food for man and horses. There are : and in the construction of vehicles and mechanical appli- fornia white oaA'.— Q. alba, a large white oak. 1, many varieties, all of which floiu-Ish best ances. bark Is used in dyeing, tanning, medieval American tree with a light-colored, heavy, very tough, The and in cool climates, practise. One species furnishes the cork of commerce. The elastic, and durable wood, making it one of the most valu- 2. Any other grass of the genus acorns of some species are sweet and edible, and in many able of the oaks. The leaves are round-lobed, and the bark Avena; as, the countries are valued as food for domestic animals. is light»gray and scaly. *Z, Any one of several other oaks, vt'lld oat, (A.fatua) of Europe, 2. The wood or timber of the oak. 3. One of various as Q. bieolor, the swamp white oak of the eastern and south- much cultivated for hay in California, other plants having a real or fancied resemblance or re- ern United States, and, on the western coast, the blue oak, perhaps the original of the cultivated lation to a true oak, as the poison-oak, Jerusalem oak, the western oak, and the Sacramento wliite oak or weeping- species; the animated oat (.4. steti- oak {Q. /o6afa).— yellowsbark oak, same as black etc. 4. One of various moths: a collectors*' name. lis) with long, stout, much-twisted awns 5. OAK.— yellow oak, achestnut-oak (Q. Muhlenbergii). [Prov. Eng.] card-playiug, club. that coll and uncoil with changes of In a H. JJicL [< AS. Oak'boy^, Ok'bei, n. A member of an insurrectionary moisture. 3. A musical pipe made ac, oak.] okt; oket. association in Ireland in 1763, that resisted forced labor [The true oaks given below may be distinguished from a stem of the oat; a shepherd's on the roads and collection of tithes, Its badge being a _ pipe; hence, a pastoral poem or song. by Q., indicating that they are of the genus Quercus. All sprig of oak in the hat. others are oaks only in name.] That strain I heard was of a higher mood; oak'eii, Ok'n, a. Made of or from oak; composed of Compounds, etc!!:— African a large tree {Old- But now my oat proceeds, oak, oaks or of the leaves or boughs of the oak; as, an oaken fieldia Africduu) of the spurge family (Eiiphorbiaceae), of Milton Lycidas 1. 88. plank; an oaXrew grove; an oa^'6;i garland, o'kent. Sierra Leone, yielding a valuable wood. Called 2i\.9.o Afri- [< AS, ate, oat,] can CeaA;.— Australian oak, any one of various species oak'cn-pint, 7^. A hard-fleshed apple: not now grown. — oat'scake", n, A cake of oat- ihe Osit {Avena sa- of Australian trees of the genus C'asuartna, of the beef- oa'kert, n. Same as ociiek. meal, usually rolled thin and baked tiva). oak'llng, Ok'ling, n. small oak. wood family (Casnarinacese).— barren or blackoack A hard.-oatsfliffht, n. Oat-ejiaff. -„ ^n enlarged spikelet. oak, Q. nigra, small and perishable, with broadly wedge- oak'^uni, Ok'um, n. 1. Naut. Hemp-flber obtained oatsfowl, n. Ihe snow-bunting.— shaped leaves.— Bartrnni*** oak, Q. keterophylla, con- by untwisting and picking out loosely the yams of old oatsgrass, «. 1. Any uncultivated species of Avena; sidered a hybrid: as, the narrow-leaved oat^grass {A. pratensis). Any so called from the Bartram garden In tarred hemp rope: used m calking ships' seams, etc., 2- Fhlladelphia, where the first one of various oat»like grasses; as, the tall or meadow oat* observed specimen was found. sometimes'also in dressing wounds. 2. Coarse hemp or — bas'ketsoak", n. Q. Michauxii, lArge and valuable, grass (Arrhenatherum avenacettm): known also b,s false flax hacklings. with gray flaky bark and large edible acorns.— bear= -white oakiinit. [< AS. ucumba, oat and evergreen grass; the wild oat»grass iDanthonia oak* n. Q.ilicifolia. See scKfB-OAK.- bitter oak, the < (7-, out, + ceniban, comb.] ock'amt; o'cumt. «pfcato).— oatsspeasibeans, n. A children's game in European Turkey oak. — black oak, Q. tluctoria, outer — leased oakum, oakum that has been shredded apart which the players circle about In a ring, singing a song de- bark black. Inner yellow. Called also yellow''bark oak and for use.— white o., same as oakum, 2. scribing, with gestures, the sowing of seed, etc.: mentioned quercitron'oak.— h\ue oak, (^. Douglumi of California, oak'y, Ok'i, a. Like an oak; tough; strong. by Froissart as early as the 1 4th century.- ofl"one*s oats, Uke the white oak in the quality of Its timber, and some- oan'fler, On'dgr, n. IDlal.j Undern. oan'durtht. so indisposed bodily as to be unable to eat with any relish. times called the moutitain white ortA:.— Bay oar, Or, vL 1. To propel with an oar or oars. 2. To As a matter of fact, I'm a bit restless and off my oats, and per- oak, same as Australian OAK.— British oak, Q. Ro- use as an oar. haps you could recommend some sort of sleeping-mixture. KIP- bur, extending through the most of Europe and to western LING 3Xine Own People, the Passage p. 103. [u. s. B. CO.] I caught her; then End of Asia, attaining great age and size.— bur^oak, n. Q.rtiac- Oaring one arm, and bearing- in my left — rolled oats, a flaky preparation of oats hulled, rolled, rocarpa, large and valuable, with acorn the half immersed The weight of all the hopes of half the world, and steamed for family use. — seaside oat, a tall grass In or entirely enclosed by the cup with its pointed scales. Strove to buffet to land in vain. Uniola paniculata) growing on sand^lulls near the Atlan- Called also ( over'cup or mo^np-'cup oai.— ehestniitsoak, Tennyson Princess iv, st. 19. tic-skinless oat, an oat yielding glumeless seed,— to «. Any one of various oaks with leaves coarsely sinuate- oar, n. 1 . A wooden implement for rowing, sculling, or feel one's oats, to be conceited or self^inioortant: also, toothed, but not lobed. and so resembling chestnut-leaves. steering boat, consisting of shaft (called to be frisky.— to have sown one's wild oats, to (1) Q. Muhlenberuil or Called a a long the Castanea. also yelloio oak. have given up youthful follies. — to sow wild oats* (2) PrinuH. also loom) with a handle at one end and a blade or spoon at V. Called swamp chestnnt'oak or rock to indulge in the follies or excesses to which youth is espe- chetftntU-oak. (3) O. prlnotdes, the dwarf chestnut«oak. the other, the whole being operated as a simple lever, with (4) cially liable.— wild oat. 1. Same as oat, 2. 2. In the Q. densifiora, a Callfornlan evergreen oak of dense foliage. a rowlock or thole-pins for a fulcrum. 2. The person plural, youthful follies or excesses. — oak, Q. ChinejiHis, a very hardy Chinese evergreen who uses or plies an oar; a waterman; oarsman. .oat'en, Ot'n, a. Made of oats or oatmeal or of the straw oak.— chinkapin^oak, n. The dwarf chestnut-oak {q. The captain . . . was one of the beet oars in the university boat. of oats; also, sounded from an oaten or musical pipe. prinoidea). — coatit live-oak, Q. agrifolta, an evergreen T. Hughes Toin Brovm at Oxford vol. i, ch. 1, p. 6. [T, &. f. '68.] oak of California and Mexico. — cowsoak, n. Same as Joh. Mayor, in the first book of his History of Scotland, contends BASEKT-OAK.- tlyer'wsoak, n. Same as black oak.— 3. Brewing. A paddle for stirring mash. 4. An oar- much for the wholesomeness of oaten bread. BURTON Anat. Mel- Emory's oak, O. Emort/i, a shrubby evergreen oak of like swimming-appendage, a parapodinm of an annelid. ancholy pt. i, § 2, mem. 2, subs. 1, p. 140. [J. W. M. '57.] southern Texas. New Mexico, etc., with small leaves and [< AS. «r, oar.] A shepherd next, you haunt the plain. acorns. — Enelish oak. the British oak.-Em-ope- — muffled oars, oars the looms of which are wrapped And warble forth your oaten strain. an oak, the British oak.— everKreeu oak, same as with material to prevent their making a noise when In use. Thomson Hymn on Solitude L 16- HOLM-OAK.— gray oak, V- coccinea, var. ambigua, of — oar'scock'''. n. [Prov. Eng.] The water-rail.— oar'- ~ oaten pipe, same as oat, 3. the northeastern United States, with the foliage of the red flsh", n. A rlbbon-flsh (Regalecus banksi) of northern oatli, 0th, n. 1. A solemn attestation or imprecation oak and the acorn of the scarlet oak.— srreeu oak, oak seas with oar=lIke ventral rays and sometimes 20 feet long. in support of a declaration, promise, or vow, by means of colored green by lu impregnation with the spawn n. of the — oar'toot", A liipnold crab (genus liemipes).— onrs an appeal to some personage or object regarded by the InnguB Peziza leruifinom.— linWy-AeiLMtiA oak, same as footed,u. Having oar-like feet,a8 some crustaceans.- oar= person swearing as nigh and holy. COA8TLIVE-OAK.— ludianoak, the teak=tree.— Italian lot'k, n. A device, as of wood or metal, on the gunwale or oak, Q. jEhchIum, of southern Kurope, with sweet edible outrigger of a boat for keeping an oar in place, and serving But in general an Oath includes an imprecation. And hence acorns.- Jerusalem oak, or oak of Jerusaleiii, an as a fulcrum while rowing; a rowlock.— oar^propeller, Puffendorff defines it to be ' A religions asseveration by which we annual herb, renounce the mercy or imprecat*^ tne vengeance of Heaven, if we a goosefoot ( Chenopodinm liotryH): named n. A contrivance for sculling by machinery.—oarsswi vei, speak not the truth.' WILLIAM FLEMING Moral Pliilosophy pt. ii, from the shape of Its leavers. Called &lm feu t/ier'Uerajd am. 7i. A forked rowlock pivoted in a socket, the oar being bk. ii, p. 294. [J. M. 70.] — Kellogff^H oak, same as Sonoma oAK.— kerines* pivoted In the fork.— oar'weed", n. Any large seaweed oak, n, Q. cocci/era. Sec KEKMEB.~inoHsy«ciip oak. of the genus Lftrnitiaria: so called from frequently becom- 2. Law. Such an attestation or affirmation of the truth 1. The bur-oak. ti. The Kuropean Turkey oak.— New ing tangled with oars; especially, Lnminarla digitata; tan- of a statement as renders liable to punishment for per- a tall tree Zealand oak, (Kuightla excelm) of the pro- gle—rigged oar, an oar pivoted at the gunwale and jury one who wilfully thus asserts what; is not true. 3. t lead family (Protearxm), yielding a handsome wood much moved by a lever so that the rower can face forward.— to The form of words in which such attestation is made. 4. used for furniture, etc.— nutKall oak, same as oall- to move oars In a reverse direction from back the oars, A frivolous and blasphemous use of the name of the OAK. See gall.— oak«apple, n. A gall produced on an that In going ahea

Bofa, firm, ^k; at, fare, accord; el^m^nt, gr = over, felght, § = usage; tin, machine, % ~ renew; obey, no; not, nor, atom; full, rule; but, born; atsle; —

oathable 1911 object

matioD, either in of the form a profane adjaration, or — ob'da-rate-ly, a^/r.— obMu-rate-ness. n. of the planet Uranus, discovered by W. Herschel In 1787. [F., containing a comiptetl or softened form of an originally Obduracy.— ob"du-ra'llont, n. The process of be- < OF. Auberon: op. MHG. a/6, elf.] n. wandering profane expression. [ < AS. /TM, oath.] coming or the fact of being obdurate. ob^er-ra'tiont* A about. Synonyms: adjuration, uftidavit, anathema, ban, bias- o^be* ". Same as obM o'be-ati o'be-alij. o-bese', o-bis', a. Encumbered with excess of flesh; blasph^'my. cursing, Pliemln^. curse dt-num-iatlon. execra- o-be'dl-ence, o-b!'di-ens. «. 1. Submission toorcom- very corpulent; exceedingly fat. wlio ^*'J'_'.^l''.PF}-S''}}?}\-}}l^^y^^^^^^^^ ^*'^*'"'?.*^iP'"«f*n*ty' pliance with a command, prohibition, known law, or rule A landlord looked like an obese Don Juan was established reprobatlon,8wearJng,8worn!*iatem(.'nt.vow. lu the highest behind a bench in a distant comer. of duty; the performance of what is required or enjoined sense, as in a court of justice, " an oath Is the monastic obedience. made to man in the name of God; a rote, to Gt>d without the excessive fatness. 2. Pathol. Morbid corpulency. 1 America, then, it may be said that no one renders obedience to"~ .- ^~" " ~ That whieh is aXaggiBhobesitif to»day boisterous Inter^'entlon. often without the knowled>re, of man. In the „.„ K.,, , J , J 1 ^.; ii-v.;o... -j was rosy healthm man, but tojustice«justice and to law. De TocqVEVILLETocqveville DemoeriKyDemonxuty min » j ™ lower sense, an otith may be mere blatphf^n!/ or prqfane p- ... - „,___...,, f^ few years back Am. tr. by F. Bowen, vol. i, ch. 5, p. 97. [s. A F. '63.] «r*'ariMj7.— Antonyms: l»enedictlon, t>enlsoD, blessiiiHg. Thackeray P^ndennts vol. Hi. ch. 8, p. 131. [E. A L. '91.] Phrases, etc.: — assertory oath* oro. of evidence* 2. i:ccr yield to the government or equivalent to obeisance or duly. which there Is no authority of law, and Tor falsity to which [OF., < iZ obadientia, direction of; execute the mandate of; do the bidding of; charge of [>erjury will not He.— o. of allegiance, a decla- < oba>jiien(t-)g ; see obedient.] as, children, obey your parents. 2. To comply with or Synonyms: see allegiance. ration under oath hv which a [K-rson promises to bear true carry into elTect; rule one's conduct by; as, the laws allegiance to a panicularKov4Tnnient or sovereign.— — active obedience (Theol.), the part of Christ's oat h'l must be obeyed. 3. To be controlled by; yield to the rite", ». The ceremony of talffng an oath.— official righteousness that embraces his entire life and death, viewed o.t impulse or operation of; as, a ship obeys her helm. or o. of office* an oath taken by a person on assuming an as vicarious obedience.— passive o. 1. Implicit sub- utfice. and promising Adelily to Ma duties.— poor>delit- mission to the constituted authorities: held by some sects Men make their fate, and do not fate obey. or^M o*. the oath required of and made by the debtor in to be a political and religious duty even when It necessitates ALICE Caby Droiming Moth 1. 43. pnx-eedlngs under the poor-debtor law. — promissory acts that are repugnant to the moral and religious sense. II. f. To yield ol>edience. [< F. obiir, < L. obcediOy Theol. 0.4 an oatii pledging future action. The violation of sucn 2, The part of Christ's righteousness that embraces < ob, near, 4- audio, hear.] o-belse't; o-belsb't; an oath is not perjury. his entire life, and especially his sacrificial death, viewed as o-beye't; o-bey»e't. a. Capable of taklnsan t>ath. vicarious suffering. oalh'a-blet, Synonyms: comply, defer, keep, obser^'e. submit, yield. oat'meal'', Ot'mfl', n. 1. The meal of oats: applied — o-be'di-en-cert, n. A member or functionary of a See synonyms monastic congregation, o-be'di-en-llart.— for govern. See follow; keep.— Anto- also to porridge made of it. 2. Panic-giass. [W.J 3t. o-be^di- nyms: contemn, defy, disobey, infringe, refuse, resist, en'ci-a-ryt, «. One owing obedience. [0-] One of a band of 17th-centur>' London street ruffians. violate. »-beMI-ent, o-bt'di-ent, a. Executing or submitting to oaze* Hz, n. [Dial, or Obe.] Same as ooze. — o-bey'er, n. One who obeys or is obedient. a behest, law, rule, or restriction; ob-./>ix^. Towanl; to; against; facing; reversely; over; willingly complying authority or habitualb-yieiaing to author" near; on acc«:>uiit of; as, oi&ject, oblique, o6scure. Ob- is ob*lfi**r»?A\"f.'*?o rend^ the resolution of. it>;S'!'\msubmissive;i? f dutiful, used In words of Latin origin only, and not In forming new o-be'di-blet. ob-firm'atet.-ob''Rr-ina'iiont, ». Stubbornness. words, except in the case of certain sclentlflr tenn*'-, as, ob* IprofeMmyseirm myself bis o6edfea(obedient servant, as I shonldshonid profeuprof« myself ob-fu*'<*ate, obfus'ket, vL [-CA'TED; -CA'TING.] 1. ovate. It fs often merely Intensive, and of no appreciable yoort. sir, if I waa addreuin^ you by letter; but ' what measure of To confuse the mind of ; perplex; muddle; bewilder. force Id English. Ilefore Ct/,i/,p,ob- by asslmllatloa be- obedient service I mi^t cbooae to render to hira or lo you remains And now, my gt^nd friends, I've a fine opportunity comes oc', of'. Off-, op-: in a few fnst*nces It beccmiea o6«> at my own option. Chablottk Elizabeth JudoA'a IJon ch. 22. ' To otifuscate you all- by, sea with impunity. p. 309. {B. ASCR. terms or «w-. ( < L. ob-, < ob, towM>d. for.] '48.J Barhah Ingoldsby Legends, Mr. Peter's Story t/t. 7. ob't* n. IHeb.I A necromancer. [OF., L. < ob(xdien(f-)g^ ppr. of obadio: see obet.] 2t. To cloud or darken. ob'-i^ n. Au objf-etlon: abbreviation Id gloMcs totbeologtcal Synonyms: see dutiful; obsequious. [< LL. obfmeatus, pp. of o&- fusco, L. ob, to, ~\-j'uscus, tawny.] in-atiiMi*. — »b':and«Hol'er*^. ". A religious disputant; a — o-be'dl-ent-ly, adv. < ob*fusqiie't; of- profeswor of the whola*lic divinity. fUii'catel.~ob-fu8'catet, -ob«»iind.BoU+, o-be^dl-en'tiaLbe^di-en'iial, o-brdl-en'sbo-bl'dl-en'shol. a. [Rare.] AccoMIngto a. Darkened; obscure. ^^^*^"''"* *°** •olutlooa: appUed to acbolartlc sub- the rule of obedience; observant of aithorlty. — obTus-ea'tlon. n. The act of obfuscating or ob- n. A'.-s ^curiug; also, that H hich obsciiree or confuses. .„^ „. „„. ,„.^ toChrist.„ ^„, ,„ it„ obedience„„r«„rm:^ wto theui« law.mw. O'^a-dl'ah, O'ba-dai'fl, n. The smallest book of the o'hV, Folk'lore. kind sorcery crfSTrS^^i^bSuch is S^^l^V**"^th© kwe of » subject to his sovereiim. ft dutiful, f»U » 1. A of or conjuring ( -'—"—"-••- )ld Testament, ooe of the minor prophets. It« author, nspectrul. obefitentlal love. practised by the negroes of the West Indies: a revival or Obadlah. foretells the destniction of Edom and the final Matthew h'khbt Commtntartea, John xi 18-2i. survival of African magical rites. victory of .ludah and Israel Hob. OMadhyahu.] They [negroes] were act-used of witchcraft, of obi, or of some sort [ < o-bel'MUce, o-bt'sonB or o-bC'sans, 1. An act of ob-am'bu-lale^.W. To walk about. of sorcery; and ttiey were brought to me for sale. courtesv or reverence made by an inclination of the body - ob-am'^^M-la'tiontt Fox in Goodrich s Brit. BUxiuence, Rejection of Bonaparte's or the bending of the knee, Overtures v.oSA. o-bang', iVtiaLA'. n. [.Jap.] A Japanese gold colli, no longer as a manifestation of obedi in. '87.) or In Libyan eroves. in <-lrculallon. See coiy. ence an expression of profound deference or respect; where damned rit«H are done, . , Truth shaifarrest the murderous arm profane, o-bnn't. a bow or courtesy ; homage. Wild Obi die«— the veil is rent in twam. o-bnr'nc^ n. A kind of H« made obtUanee with a fr«e studied Tet air of courtesy. Caxpbkll Pleasures of Hope pt. i, st. 3S. in-;t.t n-bar'nit, HcoTT Rokeby can. b, it. IS. [W. Ind.] fetish or charm. ob'^ii u -d i'l i 0( eb'0-dlati'IO 2. A [Of African origin.] ^.r dlt I-J5, ». [LL.1 /^hof. at. Obedience. [ < F. obHssanct, < obH$sant, ppr. of o'bett o'byt. — o^bl'iiian^t n, A man who practises Hardness of hearing; partial obHr; see obet.1 o-bel'iuin-cyt; o-beFMauncet. obl.~o'blswoiii''nn, n. — n. (l»-afn»iiii. o-bei^aantt, u. Deferential; submbslve; obsequious; serv- o^bi-iHiii, Till' belief in or practise of obi. o'bi^*n. [Jap.J AbroadHilkensash by Japanese - ob''aa*dl'tn«. n. A U^- _o-bey'»an|t. worn women. paniiillv silks person d'-af. O'be'll-on, . bl'li-^n, n. [u-A./rf.] point on OTsuni's The the v, .. , . oh Fluttering to every line. of»t and sleeve. Ob'ben-itf'. .n-ait, n. *^ni—^ «k».». m/ skull where the ""«line J"'"">Kiolnine' the"»e two parietaltuiri/hil roraminarnmrnlna 'A /fiMi. A iiKinber of a An OOMg; otovene. "/«» • ;, Edwin Arnold rA« "Wo" ZJancest. 22. crosws the sagittal suture. SeecRASioMBTRiCAL points, U'lii resistant sect -»i, im/K^i ««.« of .\n«b^)tltU, wecutsors of the Men- , eb-im'bri-ket or -k^t, and lllus. under cKANiim. [ < Gr. obelos, pointed pillar.] tioiiiies. [Prob. < fJbhen, a penonsj name.] liot. Inversely imbricate, or imbri- obll-gd tv^. — o-be'll-ao. ob^bli-ga^lo, n. * a. [It.] Mm. That can . , . . , ,,,., . cate from above downward. not t>e dispensed wltli: olrel-l»K, t»b el-isk, vt. To with an obelisk a necessary accessary: applied to an mark (t). o-bla'po, o-bls'pO, n. [Cuba.] Tbe bishop* - aceeasory movement written for solo or a particular Instru- oVel-lak - A» square shaft with pyramidal top, ray. [Sp.. hishop.] ment, and indispensable for Ibe proper rendering of a roin- usually monumental or commemora- o'bit, n'bit, C'.> A-. H." HV.i (ob'it, C.« H'.« poflltlon, also, loosely, to a secoodanr accompaniment re- tive. 2, I^ypt. Archeol. A square Wr."^) (XIII), r the score: opposed to at/ //frAum. n. 1. The death of a per- ob^liHga'to:. monolith of red ^auite or syenite, ob'Vc-4-a'il-o« eb's^lw'shW or -ce-cg'UA n. Blmdness; son; decease; also, the date of death. more or less covered with hieroglyphs, ' •• ti V. [ < •>H- + L. cocNA, bUod.] ob'^cfle-ca'ii*o:. 2. A funeral ceremony; the burial serv- olHfla'vate, «b-clft'vct or -vjt, c. Inversely clavaa'; tapering slightly, and temiinattng in a ice. 3. [Eng.l A celebration in a be- club'Hbapeer- aa^^er. c<)nlrary lo the usual way — that is, flattened back and 4. R. V. Ch. Speciftcally. an office for ors, and now erected near the Lateran, front, instead of laterally. the repose of the soul of a deceased person, celebrated St. PeU'r's. and Sta. Maria Mafiglorv on ob-eon'lc-al, ob-con'lc-i go. ] ob-cor'date, ob-cftr'det or A^ a. BUM. Inversely patra*s Needles," ooe of which was re- — o'bitfSOiiK'''^. A funeral chant; dirge. cordate; heart-shaped, bat with the notch oppoeite tbe moved to London In 1878, the other to — o'bitet, a. Deceased.— o-blt.'u-al, a. Denoting stem, ob'ror'ol-ffarint. Central Park, Sew York. In V8S0. Obel- days when obits are celebrated. isks vary In height from SWLto 108 feet, ob-del'told, ebKlel'tetd, a. Biol. In- ob'l-ter, eb'l-tgr, ndr. Hy the way; in passing; Incidentally; and range In weight up to 490 versely deltoid; tons. not In necessary connection with the Issue to he detennined. tiiangnlar, with tbe atiez I The obetiak . . . was presented to the dty inwanl or downward. In regard to the authorities, it may be confessed that by far the of New York, thmuirh the Department en greater part are obiter, and some of them quite uncalled for. ob-dlp''io*«tetn'o-n)r, eb-

ftem'o-ni. W. (-stl'mo-ni, i laniafl Paaha. . . . The entire expense wna T.), n. liot. [L., < ob, on, iter, way, < eo (supine itum), go.] bomeby the late William H. VanderMlt. Ap- -f The r**ver*»e of direct or normal diplo- — ob'l-ter dlc'tum, see dictum. pteton^a Diet, of New York p. 191. [a. •»I.T Btemony. See Dii'iXMTKMOirY. ObcoMateLeaf* o-btt'u-a*rv, o-bich'u-c-ri or -bit'yu-fi-ri. I. a. Per- 3. The daf^er-sign (t) uwxl as a mark — ob-dln'Mo-atem'o-noaa. a. letsoftheCom- taining or relating to the death of a person; as, an obitu- of reference, the second in order in the •Vdor-mrtlon, eb'dSr-mlsh'un. n. mon Wood- ary noiice. II. n. 1. A published notice of a death; •orrel. scries. See PUXcrfAXioN. The Obelisk "Cle- 1 . Temporary nambneos of a limb caused a biographical sketch of one recently deceased. The sign was originally employed In ppatra's Needle" by pressure GO tbe nerves. !|+. Hotmd sleep. [< L. ofr- In order to go safely to heaven it is Roman Catholic senice-books as a dl- 19 Central Park, not neceiwary that we ehonld have a laudatory dorrnw, fall asleep, < o6, toward, -f dormio^ sleep.] rectlon to the priest to make the sign ^ew York. obituary on earth. A. ALEXANDER Thoughts ob-dari'r, rt. over; on Religious Experience ch. 17. p. 3i>5. b. p.] To draw cover, •b-dace^t,— ob- of the cross. Afterward it was employed In books to note Ip. dur'ilon^, n. act of Tbe drawing over, as a covering. pssssges of doubtful ^fniiinrnrHs, and Is now used as a mark 2. Ji. C. Ch. A register of anniversary obitual days ob^dii-ra-e)-, ob'diuraai (xm). n. 1. The state or of reference to a fi>ol-in>te. to designate obsolete words, or when masses are celebrated for the dead. [< LL. obitu- (luality of Nine otMhirate; toMnaibilUy to appeals to tbe before idosrapblcal dates to denote the year of death. arius,< h.obitus; see obit.] — o-blt'u-a-rl-ly, adv. f(i-liML.'v: iii\iti(ii)le hardnesa of heart; obatlnacy. [< L. obetiscus, < Gr. obelisl'os, dim. of obeloe, pointed After the manner of an obituary.— o-blt'u-a-rlst, The iw-fTiiihif't/Wur-nryof pillar.] — double obelisk, double the besvciMtooormifferlng, . . . Uin a dagger {%). n. The writer of an obituary.— o-blfu-a-rlH^tlc, a. truth but thr outward f»jrm "t the IHvirmt pity. — oVel-U'^cal, a (ob'^e-Ua'caf, W.),a. Shaped [Rare.] Of or pertaining to the writing of obituaries. H. JAinn, Hu. Submtance and Shtidoirch. 238. [t. * r. tS.] 13, p. like an obelisk, ob'el-la-cart. jRejected by committee on new words.] 2. ronflrmce further objected, that to assign loss of heat aa ob^du-ralc*. rt. To r«-nd*'r oUlurate. ob>daro^t* cate a superfluous passage. the cause of any changes, is to attribute these changes not to a ob'du-rate, ob'dlu n-t or -n-t (ob-dlftr'ct, Eng. poets) force, but to the or force, lo the Veoire edition of Homer, 27 lines, beginning with the 3Mth, absence a (XIII), a. 1. Impassive to feelings of humanity or pity; are marked with an obeluM. Spenckb Universal Progress, ch. 1, p. 42. [a. '78.1 not to be movwi by argument or entreaty; Inexorable. ANTHOK Homer''* lUad bk. i, p. 178, note. [h. '56-1 2+. To put In the way of; project or bring into view. Khe was as oMurafe as marble. fLL.. <^ (Jr. (A>eU>H. u spit.] II. i. To declare oneself opposed to anything; offer Wm. Black lf«menvch. 33. p. SB. [H. *77.] ob-eq'al-lal*'+. W. To ride about. cose(l.— ob-jecfa- ' Oberiand In Switzerland. 3v . I .1 * , 1 I It r » . » t . Not plastic; refractory; iinyiekllng. bl(e, rt. That may be objected.— [< L-oMuro/w, ob'er-on, Hbtrnn. /. W. Wr. (5'be.r«n^ O. n. \. Folk> ob"jec-ta'tlon, pr>. of 'VW'/m, harrlen. < ob, to, -f cfurtM, bard.] ob- tore. TheklnKofjhf falrl»*s. husband t>fTltania: a character Disputiitious or caviling t>b^ection. dure'*; ob-dured't. In ShakesiM-are's "Midnuuitner NlKlit's Dream." Al'bcr- Ob'jeet, ©b'ject, n. 1. .\nythmg that comes within the Synonrms: see hakd: obstixatie. ontt Au'ber-ont. 'i. .ixtron. The most distant satellite copnizance or scrutiny of the senses; especially, any-

objectify 1313 oblige

thing tangible or visible: an objective or external object; ot^ective authority. 3. Directing the mind or activity Geom. Flattened at the poles: opposed to prolate. [< object-object. toward external things without reference to or apart L. otdatus, spread out, < ob, out, + latus, borne.] Tb«r« t* m considerable mosqae at Canton, of irreat antiquity, from personal sensations; also, resulting from such di- —ob-late'ness, ». ami formiaCi with its |>atfvKla or miuar«l, a conspicuous ottfect on rection; sometimes implying undue regard for the exter- ob-late'^, a. li. C. Ch. Consecrated to sacred uses; de- mmrtmok the city\v thf river. the (o ual. U) Grasping and representing fact** as they are; voted to a religious life.— Oblate Fathers, certain con- J. F. Davis Thf Chinese vol. i. ch. 1, p. 83. [h. 'W.J unbiased by prejudice or temperament; not idealizing gregations of secular priests who live In community like the Anything, whether concrete or abstract, real or imag- 2. tilings; practical: said of an artist, a writer, etc., or of monastic brotherhoods.- O. Hitters ol* Providence. inarj", "that may be perceiveti or appreheiuletl by the '*''"'^'* '" his Kabits of thought. (2) Made up of objects repre- niin b ff 7i. soid. odjicio- sec OBJECTION 1 ob-jec'llve, 1. Gra?n. The objective case. 2.._ Op-.^ Comparpare OBLONGUM. f < OBLATE", a.] see aim; cause; design. ^\*^-tics. ^^In ^a telescope or microscope, the lens or ccombina- ob-lec'tater, vt. To please hlg"ldy;my delight.' Synonyms: -: 1 .._.r__. " • „» *,.^. .. . ^ ™ ...... ^jQjj— ^,f lengeg that brines the rays to a ^ — ob"lec-ta'tiont. H. Delight conferred or enjoyed. Compounds, etc. : — ob'jecticlause", n. Gram. A focus. 3. An ^ob'li-gn-bKe, «b'II-ga-bl,a.,--.---[liare.l Under obligation;--.-„ reC' noun or substantive clause standing to the principal verb objective point: originally a military use. ,-, i...- . - , ^.- ,t^,,-.„ ^ .- . "Kiilzing obligations; worthy of trust; responsble. In the relation of an object; as, I see that he has come. See objective .u . c 1 .X. Their . . was the exploration of a large nver that ob'll-irailt^* fcaill, ouob'Ii-frantJl guni, n.n i^lSSrnfj) Jaw A rwrson hniind CLA(.:sE.— o.ifiuder, n. An eyepiece of moderate mag- emptied itself into the sea some miles to the southward of Botany "" t,aW. Aperaon DOUna nifying power attached to a microscope, used to locate an Bay, but of the existence of which there was no indication on the "y Contract tO do Or pay something. [< L. 0bliganit-)8^ object in the field for closer examination by a glass of chart of Cantain Cook. ppr. of obligo;...-...See OBLIGATE, 2\1 higher power.— o.iKlasH, n. A lens or combination of A. H. flARKHAM>1 ARKHAM S/rSir JohnJoftn FranklinJTVanfcitnch.ch. 3. 36. fD.[d. M.m. co.] ^ 3, p. *ACO.l ob'll-a( i-^ate, eb'li-get, vt. [-ga'ted; -ga'ting.] 1. To two or more lenses of such dispersive power and curvatures — adverbial objective, the objective case used with bind in a legal or moral sense or by a legal or moral tie, as to bring all the rays of light passing through It one to the value of an adverb, to express extent of space, time, as by contract, the focus.' IS, promise, or treaty; hold by conscience and same as nearlyrly as practupracticable. Crown and measure, manner etc.; as, he ran a mile; he came full flint glass, or or a sense of duty, or by the force of moral or legal the Jena glass, Is used In making them. An speed; he dreamed last 7iight. Such an objective may qual- object-glass corrected Y)y a motives; impose positive obligation combination of lenses of dif- ify a verb, adverb, or adjective.— coif nate o., see cog- upon. erent densities, so that the spectral colors of refraction nate.— dry o. {Micros.), an objective used without any I am obligated by the law of right, but not necessitated. shall not appear at the focus. Is called an achromatic object' liquid between It and the object to be examined.— eudo- Whedon Freedom of Witt pt. i, ch. 4, p. 50. [ca. 4 p. 'M.] f/ia^.^.— o.»Ien8, 11. That lens of a telescope or other mei'sion o. (J/^t-ro*.), an object-glass In which chromatic 2. To bind or hold firmlv to similar Instrument which brings rays to a focus; a single some siieciflc act or engage- aberration Is done away with by liquid between its lenses.— lens used as ment; hold to the fulfilment of duty; bind by a formal an object-glass.— o.slesson, n. A lesson in ininierNion o. (Micros.), an object-glass used with a drop which the object to pledge; constrain; pledge. 3. To place obliga- be Known, or a representation of It, is of liquid between It and the object to be examined. under shown to the eye.— o.iobject. «. An object not In the sub- ob-ie<>'tlvp-lv' fth.iep"tiv"'li'''/j1r^jr" Tn iin"nVi'i'M'ptiv(imnn tion oy a favor or courtesy; place under a sense of obli- ject or conscious mind; an object In the external world, or gation: a colloquial vulgarism. [< L. oOligafus, of ner-^' an obiectooji-tt, tsoeciSlvespecially one externalxt^^nmUoto tliethe mina.nfnd pp. outside the mind: opposed to a subject^object, In one con- obligo, bind, < 06, about, -j- ligo, bind.] sclousness.- o.i^sou I, h. soul That ""hich. contemplated objectively (that is, as existing_ exter-^ A attributed to objects, as ob'lT/jI^n r.^ ..»-_.. .. . , ; '. to"'«h'M'«^r'm"''^^eb'li-getIl-gei "n^^'nf7^,i w^otriot^ ,_ . , ".*"?nally to the mmd),mind), we call a law; the "samesame conterapIateTsubjec-contemplated subjec- ^"*'" "ff«-lt»ll-ffate, OD OJoj'-ggt,-ggt, a. LBound or restricted,„„. clothes or weaponMo'accoiinrfor these fntVtobjVctsbe^^ '' > «.ki.„„.-,. ^.*-...,i»„ .v,„* " «».„„:.„ <• ^„* „ livelytively (that la,ia, as existini" —oDiigate— a parasite seen In dreams- believed In bv certain sav«ir(> TiaHnn« — rt , existing m a subject or mind) is an idea. parasite, that can not grow Coleridge Works, clurch aid Stale in vol. vi, 31, [h, -oS,] saproptotlcally «a«^f An engineer' or ^rv?yo^ Si! p. 'ea-ness, n. leaching,«»» "n. A method of teaching which prusents tlie ob-Jcc'tiv-Ism, eNcCtiv-izm, m, 1 . The power that "- " "-^ ..'^.''".fi"- object to be known to— the pupil. When the'• object to be enables an author or artist to treat subjects objectively "*?•"&*•!""' "o "-ge'shuu, n. 1 . The act of obli- known Is a material thing or phenomenon, it Is presented or the state of being obligated; also, that or apart from his own personality, or the quality that re- g^'ing;----- which to the pupirs mind through one or more senses. obligates. «-.,,., sulta from such treatment. 2. P/iUott. (1) The tendency 2. The binding or constraining power of The kindergarten is not mainly object'teaching, though of to overestimate the importance of or to give undue conscience liolding to duty; the binding power of a course a constant fjbject*teaching is involved. promise, contract, oath, or vow, or of law. natural, civil, EUZABETH P. Peabody Training Schools for Ktndergartners prominence to the facts of sense-perception, or the ob- or moral; that lect. iv, p. 80. [D. c. H. '««.] jective elements of knowledge, (2) The theory that Solitical, which constitutes legal or moral gives uty, constrains a jierson to the performance of its re- ob-jee/tl-fy, eb-jec'ti-faj, t'^ [-fied; -py'ino.] 1. To precedence in order of time and sequence and quirements, and renders him liable to its sanctions in place in the condition or relation of an object; present to in importance to the facts of the non-ego over those of case of failure in that performance. the apprehension as an object; render objective or objec- the ego.— ob-jcc"tl-vl8'tlc, a. tual. ob-jec'U-vatet; ob-jec'tlzej. oVJec-tlv't-ty, eb'jec-tiv'i-ti, n. 1. The state or re- All obligation necessarily implies an obliger. different from th« party obliged; and moral obligation beinj? the obligation of a free knowledge lation of being objective; the power of employing the Our of the outer world arises only as we form certain agent implies a law; and a law implies a lawgiver. The will of conceptionsandofc^fc/i/y senses on external objects: to their contents in inclependent existence. opposed suli)ectivity. 2. God, therefore, is the true ground of all obligation. Wm. Flbm- B. P. Bowne Psychological Theory pt. u, ch. p. 258. [H. '87.] character 1, The of thoucht or thinliing as directed toward ING Moral Philosophy pt. i, bk. ii, ch. 5, p. 162. fj. M. 70.1 2. To give or impute reality to, such as is held to belong and corresponding with objects. ob-jec'tive-ness$. The first note of the moral law, as of all law, is obligation. to the world of objects. [< LL. objectum, object (< L" The same objectivity of mind which, as a philosopher, led him W. S. Lilly On Right and Wrong ch. 2, p. 48. [c. * H. W.] to seek the law oti/ecto' see object, v.), -f -fy.] of phenomena in nature, and not in the intelli- 3. A requirement imposed by the customs of society or gence, led him as a politician to seek the law of political — ob-jec"tl-ll-ca'tlon, n. action in the laws of propriety and expediency; what one owes as circumstances, and not in conscience. K. P. WHIPPLE Lit. Age §b-jec'8hun, of a fitting return ob-Jec'tlon,. ... _ for , n. 1._. act of objecting. „ . The _^ of„j Elizabeth,^_, Bacon, ^.™„.p. 289. t„.«[H. m. „^„& CO. '88.]™ , kindness and courtesy: a constraint with or without presenting grounds. 2. That which is **'" restraint arising from the relations of society. 4, oi^.i^c'tlv-lze eb-iec'tiv-aiz v T i7ed- i"zino 1 ¥ / " L i »• -l., •'., ... '. .' "-J '• broughtbroutrht forward asftR aH groundorniiiiH ornr argumentflrcnmicnt againsto.minatanv.any mr^... ^ .J.^. . . . . An instrument lu wHting by whlch ouc Is lu law; To make objective; give objective existence to. bound thing; a negative or dissentingdeciaration; statement of especially, at common law, a deed whereby one binds By certain aspects of his theory, he [Kant] opens the way again opposition; fault found; himself impediment raised. to a very different and more profound doctrine, which, while ob- under penalty to do a thing; a penal bond. 5. A * Nothing.* replied the artist, ' will ever be attempted, if all pos- jectivizing the final cause, like the earlier philosophy, gives it a medieval scholastic rule allowing a disputant to assume sible ol^Jectiona must be first overcome.' new form and an entirely different signification. Janet Final an obligation; hence, any rule ofdisputation. [F., < L. JOH.vsoN Rasselas 19. [s. '80.] Caunea tr. by Affleck, bk. li, ch. 2, p. 359. [T. * T. c. '78.] ch. 6, p. h. obligatto{7i-), < obligo; see obligate, v.] 3t. Cause of grief or anxiety. 4t. Aggression; attack. II, i. To write or philosophize in the method or spirit Synonyms: see duty. [< LL. ob}ectto{7i-)^ < L. otuectus, pp. ototijicio, object, of objectivism. ob-Jec'tiv-lset. — obligation ofcontracts, the legal efficacy of con- tracts in respect < ob, l>efore, A-jacio, throw.] ob'ject-ize, eb'ject-aiz, vt. [-ized; -i'zing.] To bring to the rights and duties of the parties.— of o., required and obligatory; Prepositions: to or against. into existence and make^ observable;„., realize. as, confession at least once a year Is of obligation. ob-jec'tlon-a-bl(e, ^b-jec'shun-a-bl, a. Liable to — ob"ject-I-za'Uon — ob''ll-ga'tioii-al» ff. Characterizing or consti- objection; deserving of disapproval; oflfcnsive; repre- ob'Ject-less, eb'ject-les, 1. Having no aim; piir- h^ps'bje^— ©>rje<---.—tton-a-bly,---..---arfv. PO?eless.poseless. 2.2, Having no corresponding object; as/im-ai,'im- .^-,. „ . taplfi.?g"'ogrigatlin°^^ ob'4ect-lst,KM .. eb'ject-ist, n. who adheres to is is One or agination o4;«c,L before, +/«ro, swear, <^m«, law.] tion to do or forego an act: followed by on or upon, for- $b-jec'tiv,©b-jec'tiv, a.'a. \,1, Psychol._ ^ & Philos. (1) Of "J'J. '!/:[{' ob^'ju-ra'tioii. merly by to, governing the person. or belonging to an object; having the nature of an ob ob-jur'ga.e eb-jur'^6t, ./, [-oa-ted; .-oa-ting.] The savage and the civilized man vary greatly in their es- ject or bJing tha is tK^ugk o o?pirceivrf\'ls"op°i^^d To may timate of what particular acts are right or wrong, and yet agree to that whlSh ^^''''^ severely; scoff; chide. [< L. vbjurmlm pp. of in thinks or perceives knd to the activUy^ of the recognition that such acts as are right are absolutely obliga- the mental agent: oppostij <^urgo,< 06, agaIiv8t+,/«rfl'o scold,

obliging; 1213 obscurity

Siaisance; place under obligation by favor or acconmio- The circular hut to be easily built mufit be saiall. and room is — ob-o''Tate*cln'vate, 'i. Bot. Obovalely clavate. ation: a common term of civility; ae, oblige me by best tnuned by building the house oblong, with a rid^ pole along — o.icuneate, a. liot. Obovately cuneate.— o,»oblong, the roof where the Blopiiitf poles from the sides meet. a. Bot. Ubovately ubloiig.— coming inside; I am much obliged to you. 4t. To bind ob-o''va-ti-lu'li-ons, a. E. B. Tylok Anlhropolof/y ch. 10, p. 231. [.K. '81.) £ot. Having obovate leaves. by law or bond; obligate. [< F. obliger, < L. obligo; 2. Math. Having one principal axis longer than the' ~ ob-o'vate-ljTf adv. In an obovate manner. BeeoBLiuATKt V.) OD-Ushe't. other or others. 3. Hot. Elliptical, the length being ob-o'vold, ob-0'veid, a. Solidly obovate. Syaonvma: see accommodate; bind; compel. twice or thrice the width, as in many leaves. [< L. ob- ob-o'ze, eb-5'ze, n. LUus.] A Ru^ian transport-wagon. — o b"'ll*iffe©', n. One who is obliged; specifically longuH, before. long.] Kvery horae is (Law), the person In whoee favor a bond or other obli- < ob, + longus, fastened by a long halter to the preceding wagon, — ob^lonu;:el-lip'tic-a1, a. Nat. Hint. Oblongly el- so that a train of tifty or a hundred fib<}Z€8 fomis one unbroken gation is entered into: opposed to obligor and obliger.— liptical.— u.jRiirfolale, a. Oblongly lanceolate.— o.: caravan. Kensan in Century Magazine May, '88, p. 21. ob-ltee'meiit, n. 1. [Archaic] A favor or accom- ovale, ((. Ohloii^Iy ovate. o-braid'tt t'i. To abraid. moUaticm. An obligation.— ob-irger, n. One it. — ob'loiK$f ''ImIi. a. Somewhat oblong. — ob'* ob-rep^tion, eb-rep'shun, 7*. [Rare.] The act of creeping who obliges.— ob*'II-gor', //. Law. The person who lou55"'ly', «(//- In the form of an oblong; as, oblongly upon secretly; also. In Scots law. the obtaining of gifts of bond, to perform an obligation. escheat by falsehood. is bound. «»pecially by shaped. — ob'lon|2:''ness, n. [ < L. obreptio{n-), < ob, to, + repo, creep.] ob-ll'gliijff^ ob-lai'jing, pa. Having a disposition to do ob'loii^,n. A figure having greater length than breadth; — ob'^rep-ti'tioust* " Acting by surprise or fraud; obtained by stealth or falsehood. favor* for others, or characteristic of such a disposition; speciflcally, in geometry, a long rectangle. ob'i*o-Kacet, rt. To abrogate a superseding act. complaisant; accommodating; &», an obiif^ng friend. by ob'^lon-g'a'ta, obMeu-ge'la or -gy'ta, n. Anat. The ob'rok, ob'r«k. n. IKus.j The ta.\ or flue paid a see accommodating; friendly; polite. by Rus- Synonyms: medulla oblongata. [< h.oblongus; see oblong.] ob- sian pcHStiut when absent from his village. — ob-ll'slnff-ly, a^r.— ob-11'stiig-iiess. n. lon'ga^.— ob''lofi-ga'tal/ob-lon'gal, a. ob"ro-tiind', eb'ro-tund', a. Approaching the spher- •b^li-Rls'tic. «»/lI-Jl*'tic, a. PertalnTng lo the rules of ob-lon's:uin, ob-Iep'gum, /*. Geotn. prolate sphe- ical in shape; nearly •cholastlc dlsputatlun fur the acceptance of an ubllKatum. A orbicular. roid. See ob^li-qna'tion. eb'll-cw^-'sbun, n. lllare.] 1. The act ELLIPSOID. [< L. obhngm; see oblong.] ob^ru-eu-da'rl-uni, eb'ru-en-de'ri-um or -dg'ri-um, of turiiiiiK Into an oblique course; deviation from a straight ob-lo'qui-ouat, a. Defamatory. n. [-lu-A, ^rf.] Archeot. A coarse earthen vessel of a line. 'i. In-parture from the principles of rectitude. [< ob'lo-qii)-, eb'Io-cwi, n. 1. The state of one who is kind sometimes used by the ancients lo cover and protect LL. of/liQ'iatioKH-}, L. obliqiut; see OBLlitUE, r.] under odium or disgrace; infamy. < fine cinerary urns. [ < L. obruenduSy gerundive of obrtto, eb-lic' or §b-luic' (xiiO, ri. [oe-liqi'ed'; ob-lique', Thine am I still, in dsoerer, sickness, sorrow, cover, < ob, over, + ruo, fall.] OB LUii'iNG.] 1 . To deviate from the perpendicular or In conflict, obloquy, want, exile, thine. ob'rutet, vt. To overturn. -Ifrom a right line; point or move obliquely; slant. Macaulay lAnes Written Aug., 'i? st. 21. ob-ry'zumtf n. The finest gold, as that purified by fire. When her love-«ye wm fixed on me. t'other, her eye of duty, was 2, Abusive or contumelious lan^iage addressed to or ohtt", pr^x. A form of OB-. See ob-. flnely obliqued. Sheridan The HivalM act iv, m. 3. uttered concerning any i)ersintf+, n. Complaint; objection. omen. [< L. o6*c^«««, ill-omened.J ob-Kce'noust. angle; not [urallel nor at right angles; neither iH-rpenan"'Kled.* ' a. Hav- 3t. Hartfa); noxious. [< h.olmoxiu«^ liable, < ob, Synonyms: see inpkcency. aiiKleti oblique; as, — InK the an ob- against; and see noxious.] ob-nox'toas-ly* adr. ob-seiiWant, eb-skiOr'ant, n. One who obscures- spe- Hqtir^iiiaUtl trlanKle. — o.*flre» «. — ob-nox'louB-nesM, n. cifically, one who opiK>»e8 or obstructs the spread of edu- HavitiK ilie fulminate out of center, ob-nu^bt-la'tlon, ob-ni6"bl-15'Bhun, n. 1. Pathol, cation and liberty of thought; an advocate intellec- »o thai It may l»e exploded by an oh of clouded state; confused condition: said of dizziness llquc blow of the hammer: said of a A tual authority and [xipular ignorance; an ignorantist: cartridge. or obscurity of vision. 2t. The act of clouding over used also adjectively. or obscuring; also, the condition of being cloadetrover. — ob-llqae^r« adv. In an VoltAire could only shake obscurantist institutions by appealing [OF.. obnubilo^ cloud, over, ob]i(]ue direction or manner; slan^ < LL. < L. ob, + nubes^ to nuui'a love of lijfht. J. Mokley Voltaire ch. 4, p. 185. [a. '72.1 An Obllqne Leaf of - cloud.]— ob-nu'W-l«let, rt. To becloud; obscure. ingly : indirectly. — ob llqne'* Begonia. [< L. obscuran(t-)g, ppr. of obncuro; see obscurk, v.] ne«ft, n. o'bo-e. O'bo-e, C. Wr. (O'bel, S. ir.») (xiii), n. 1. A ob-fMTiir'ant-lHtt. wooden wind-instrument, of soprano compass, with a ob-lluail> luhg aud jointed, like a flute, ob-Bcure', 9b-skiQr', v. lonst^unED'^ ob-scur'ing.] or from the horizon or the level. with a mouthpiece in the smaller end, fiuger-hotes and 1. /. 1 . To dim, shade, or hide from view; render less TTwilegiiiii ofobtl^ ia th« eyebfvwa, whctber 1 voln Mw stops along Its length, and a slightly flaring vent. 2. bright, clear, or visible; as, clouds ot)«cure the sun. tArily or I differs modi fai dlffervst mi reed organ-stop of 8 feet pilch, w ith metal pi[*es giving It is the nature of darkness to obscure. Dakwui EmotUmm ^. 7, p. US. Ia. 7S.1 A tones resembling the oboe: usually placetl in the swell- Bkownino Paracelsus pt. W. 1. 360. 2. DevlaUoo from ristat or moral princl|4es; inability to organ. [lt.,< F. Afl«f6e>i»' seeHAt'TBOY.] 2. Hence, figuratively, to deprive partially or wholly of distingaith between right and wrong. haut'boyt. — vb^e da carcia [It.], a small basKtutn, a fifth or valuable or desirable qualities. Whenever man tainpvn wltk tnrtb. W doM BOC kaow Um ofr> minor third higher than tbe ordinary, fa^'trot-ci'not.— liquity of the can^r apoa which be cMen. The changes in the lanyuaife have ruined his [Chaucer's! meas- o. 4*amare, a form of oboe In use In the iHth century. ures and obscured his iiieaninKS to the iximmon JoiiM Ci-MMijfo Voteea Of tMeDtadt^U, 9. in. [J.F.J. 'U-J understAndintf. — o'bo-lat, n. A player on the oboe. D. H. WuKKLKa Hy Ways of Lit. ch. 7, p. llfi. [r. A w. '83.] 3. Afftnm. The angle between the equator and the eclip- ob'ol, eb'el, n. [ob'ols oroB'o-u, pi.} A weight and 3t. To debase or disparage. tic. CalU-d also obUquHp {^theKUfMc. { < ¥. oUiqtdiiy a silver coin among the Greeks, lit. i. To hide oneself; become ol)8cure. [< F. ob- < L. oUiguitait-)St < ooliquiu: see obliuite, a.] equal to Vi drachma. See scurer, L. ob6curOy ob*li(e^t, a. Partly covered, or blurred; Indlslioct. < < otmcurm, dark.] COIN. An obol was usually put n. 90-Iit'tr-*t, rf. — ob-acur'er, One who obscures. ob-lll>r-at«, | a'ted; -a'tino.] 1. into the mouth of a deadperson ob-acnre'ta. [ob-scur'eb; ob-»cub'kst.] Present- To blot or wipe out; expange; erase; as, to otditeraU a aa pasaage-moaey for Cnaron. 1. ing olwtructions writing. 2. To cause to dlsanpear; destroy eo aa to See DBAOHMA to clear vision, so as to render dim or faint; made indistinct, as by gloom or shade; dusky; leave no trace; utterly efface. [< L. obtiteratus^ pp. of I can prove yoardebltoiiie,eTei7 ' "^ ' *. ' ' "' shadowy; as, an oUitero, < ob. over, -4- tUera, letter.] sad daimHlf otMcure room; obscure objects. KiKosunr ch. If, 277, Half-obol of Athens. Srnonirms: we ABOLisa; axmul; caxcbl. Bmatia p. A Throutch the fogs and darkness of that obncure region, his lynx Lmacm. *n.] ob-llt'er-ate, tfb-Ut'er-et or -^ a. Almoet effaced, as eye discerns the true relations of the world and human life. CD. markin;:fi or writings, or memories. [< L.o6ofu«,< Qr. oAotov; o6«//fliriJKeni(')9, npr. of oblivi»ew; see oblivion.] a, an obovatv leaf of terious.— Antonyms: see synonyms for clear; crys- i C'oncA. (1) [O-l A gi^nus typical tal. •b^lo-ral<*^. rt. To place on hire: lei out. Quercua pn'nu*; b, obo- of Obolidx. (2) A brachiopod of less •b''lo-('u'ilan+, n. f>bli>quy. vate* lanceolate leafleta of — ob»rnri' rays, rays heat of refranglhlUty of this genus. see obol.] the visible ob^lo-ru'ior or ». A detractor or sain- JL.; Varya(.arya porcina:»«*....«. c^. an«« *™v-obo- than tleld of the spectrum. eb-loc'a-iart* vale-oblong (tayt-r. ob^O-me'irolO, eb'O-mt'goid, leaf or Jfa0?u>* — ob-Mcure'Iy;, ac/r. — ob-scure'meiit, n, "" macrvphylla. ob^ons. nb'lmig or Iftng, a. 1. Longer than broad: a. Inversely omegoid. [Archaic. J Obscuration. — ob-ttcure'iiesai, n. Ob- applifMlrnftst roumionly to re'vet or -v^'t. a. Inversely ovate; ovate, scurity. ably hut not extremely elongated. In the book-trade a but with the point of attachment at the narrow end. ob-f*ou>l-ty, eb-sklQ'ri-ti, n. [ties, j)l.] The state lKK)k is oblong who«M> width Is greater than Its height. ob-o'valt. or quality of Itoing obscure. <1) Material dimness or

au~oui\ ell; ia = feud, |Q = fature; c=k; eburcli; dta = fAe; so, sins* 1^^; k*; thin; zh == vure; F. boA» dttne.

obseerate 1914 obstinate

darkn«fle. (2) Lack of clearness, distinctness, or per- 3. Knowledge or experience acquired by obser\'ing. 4. ob-sidt'l-o-nal* §b-eid'i-o-nal, a. Of or pertaining toa

spicaity, as of thoaght or expression. siege. I An incidental remark, suggestion,sugj^estion, or statement of opinopin- [ < L. obsidioJiolU.obsidiojiolu, < obsideo:obsideo; see obsession.]obsession.I OtMCUritj/ In speech te nsoall;: the outcome of obseuritu in ion; a judgment or reflection. esi>ecially one based 01 ob-Hld'i-o-iia-ry:t* thoofht. L. T. TOWNSKND Art Speech vol. i, ch. S, p. M. [a. — a token of m | professing to be based on something observed. obHiftional coin, coin made of base metal, used 118 c-iirrcncy when the legal monev has disappeared (3) Th« condition of being unknown to fame. [< F. o6- It has become a common obsenxition . Great memory, little com- durliiK a wk'ire.— o. crown (Rom. Antiq.), a triumphal 9CurUi., < h. obseuritas^ < odscuru^^ dark.] mon sense. PoRTER Intellectual Science § 166, p. 2S9. [8. 71.] wreiuh of KTHss and twigs bestowt-d on a gem-ral who has •Vae-crmte« eb'8^*r^ v$. [liare.] To pray to; beseech. 5. [Rare.] Observance. [F., < L. obs€rvatio{n-\ < withstood a siege or retrieved a besieged town. (< L. ob»ecratu9, pp. of obaecro, 06, before, -f- sacer, »&- < oi>»einx}; see observe.] ob-serv'alt. ob-Hid'i-ouN-t-, rt. Besetting; environing, as an enemy. cred.] ob'«e-ora-to-ry, a. [Rare.] Beseet-hlug. — STnonyms: see attention; kemakk. ob-Hig"il-ia'tiont, n. The act of closing liy scaling. ob*'«e-ora'tloii, eb'sy-cr^'shun, n. 1. AV/7j«ra/«, has — ob''Hcr-va'tionscar", | An open rt|.//^„i„„/..__^ fti.-a/^ ii:.av.r.t "* «?-*«» <*«nl, eb eo-les fint, a.« Grown,.«,.. ing been transformed from tbe plural to the singular. car. or one having glass sides or ends: used either for track- ^ . obsolete; passing out of use, as [< OP. obteques^ < LL. odieqyise^ < L. obsegvor^ follow, Inspection or carrying passengers.- to take or work Passing a word. [i obsolesco,oosoleftfO, decay, prob. < od,oft, before, «;.„,soleo, use.] < 06, upon, + sequor^ follow.] + ^ from angular measurements of tlie altitude and position of ob'so-lete, eb'so-ltt, — ob-se'qul-al, a. Of or pertaining to obsequies. a. 1 . Gone out of use; no longer the sunor other celestial body. practised or accepted; ob-eie'qui-ous', ©b-sl'cwi-os, a. 1. Showing a base of a discarded type or fashion- by- Derivatives: — ob"«er-va'Uon-al, a. Per- gone; antiquated; as, or servile readiness to fall in with the wishes or will of an- an obsolete custom; smooth-bore taining to or consisting in observations: distinguished muskets are other; excessively complaisant; sycophantic or adulatory " as obsolete as flintlocks. from ex])€rim€nt(U. ' In this dictionary words are marked ob/tolete in manner; cringmg; fawning; as, an o6*-e.?(/ww* follower. if) that have ob'8er-va"tort, ?*• 1- An observer, ii. One who makes not been used by reputable authors since the year 180O. Be [Cli*rl«B II. 1 bad been taught by bitt«r experience how much an observation or remark. Words occurrlngin the Bible and Book of Common I»rayer, perHdy.jutd^in^ratitude may lie,hid uudertheo&segtitous ob-«erv'a-to-ry, §b-Zi;rv'a-tO-ri, n. [-BIES, pi."] 1. though not used elsewhere since 1800, are regarded as excep- ""* ' r of courtiers. ' - ' * tional, ' A building, elevated chamber, or domeme forfbi the observa- and marked archaic. Macaulat Kiigtand vol. i. ch. 2, p. 131. [p. 8. A CO. '49.] tion of physical phenomena, especially one fitted with 2. BM. Imperfectly developed; atrophied; suppressed; [Archaic] 3. Promptly obedient or submissive to the optical instruments; specifically, a buii'ding designed for obscure: said of markings, parts, organs, etc. [<' L. will or wish of another or others; yielding. [< F. obse- systematic astronomical observatitms. obttolelus, pp. of obsoksco; see obsolescent.] guieujT, < L. obsequio^uM, < obsequor; see obsequies.] Synonyms: ancient, antiquated, archaic, disused, obso- The Lick Observatory possesses the largest telescope of the re- STnonyms: attentive, compliant, cringing, deferential, lescent, old, out of date, rare. Some of the fracting kind in the world, but the Harvard University oftseriYi- most undent fawning, flattering. olM-dicnt. servile, slavish, words are not obsolete, as father, submissive, tory is the best euuipped for all astronomical mother, etc. A word Is work. obsolete sycophantic. — : Independent, self-assertive, which has quite gone out Antonyms The World Almanac, Telescopes p. 15. [PR. co. '92.] of reputable use; a word self-respectful. See synonyms for arrogant; austekk. Is archaic which Is falling out of reputable use, or, on the tower or cupola built — ob-»e'qul-ouj*-ly',alaced on an elevated site to afford an outlook. writers or speakers of Influence, ner.— ob-He'qul-oiii>(-nesfi«, n. The state or quality 3. MU. so that It may perhaps re- position on the^fiank of gain Its position as a living word: a Is of being obsequious or compliant; slavish submission. A a battery whence the range of word rare If there are few present Instances • tire can be observed and corrected. [< L. obsei'vatus, of Its reputable use.— Antonyms ob-se^ul-enco^; ob-se^'qui-os'l-ty^ [Rare]. see synonyms for frksh; pp. of obsen-o; see observe.] novel. ob-se^qai-ous^t^a. I, Obsequial. *J. Absorbed In grief — ob'so-Iele, li. [Eare.] To become obsolcU'.— as at a funeral.— ob-He'q ui-oiis-ly^t, adv. — physical observatory, an observatory specially ob'so-Ie"ted, a. Become obsolete; disused.— ob'se-quy't, n. Singular of obsequies. fitted up for the observation of meteorological, magnetic, ob'- or other terrestrial phenomena.— so-Iete"Iy, ac^ti.— ob'we-quy^t, 7i. Obsequious conduct; servility. Holar o., an astronom- ob'so-Iete"nes«, n. The state ical observatory specially for ob'Me-ratet, rf. To bar In: lock up. adapted observing and study- of having fallen into disuse; desuetude.—ob"»o-le'- ing the sun, as the observatory of Meudon. near Paris. ob-»erv', -a-bl, -servd'. Observe, etc. Phil. Soc. tloil, II. The act or process of growing obsolete. ob.«erv'k.b.e:>b.1frv",bl, a""". 1 .• That c^^"-^T^: ob'so-Io"tl8in, n. Something grown oteolete, as a "•f"'',-?'''.I. ^ 1. To«?„t.ftake l^^.Lnotice of;J^F^lLsee or hear '^^^^^l)with some de- served; nmnifcst to the sight, notice, or attention; dis- word or fashion; the state of being obsolete. gree of attention; perceive clearly; note. cernible; apjMirent. 2. Striking the attention; worthy mark; 2. To ob'so-lete, n. A word or form of expression that has watch attentively; scrutinize of notice or remark; notable; remarkable. carefully; as, to obsen-e the ceased to be used in living speech. For the latitude with enemy s movements; obsermng sun-spot*. 3. To follow which the And it '9 obafrx'abte in the ni^ht wherein he was l>om, by a mi- word is applied in this dictionary, see obso- carefully or keep religiously; heed, follow, or celebrate; racoloos li^ht the nipht became as day. Luite 2, 9. M. Hale Con- lete, o., 1. comply with; as, to tfmptatione. Knowledge of Christ pt. i, p. 75. ISHBOW. 1682.] oiseTTc the Sabbath. ob'Hia-cKe, eb'sta-cl, [Prov. Eng.) Offering opposl- obstinate. 3. Demanding olwervance; usually observed or followed; There are people who observe the rules of honor as we observe i*i*"? the stars, from afar off. Ob'sta-cle, II. customary. [< h.fibMervabUis, < observe; see observe.] Hugo Les Mis^rabtes tr. by Isabel Hap- That which Stands in the way of prog- good Jean Valjean bk. i. ch. 21, p. 47. Ic. 2 CO. '62.] ress — ol>-«erv'a-blettn. Anything noteworthy.— ob- or accomplishment; a hindrance; impediment; 4. To express as an opinion; remark drawback; an obstruction, serv'a-bl(e-npHS, «.— ob-»erv'a-bly, aclr. incidentally. either in a physical or moral sense; also (rarely), ob-»erv'ance, $b-zj;rv'an8, n. 1, The act or practise Tully was the first who observed, that friendship improves hap- an objection or act of opposition. piness and abates misery, by the doubling of our joy, of observing; a regard for and adherence to a rule; the and dividing The early steps of a Btudent in almost every science are met by of our grief. ADDISON Spectator May 18, 1711. certain obstacles; act or custom of keeping or following that which is ap- if he succeeds in surmounting these obstacles, treat with his future protrress seems to be insured, pointed; compliance, as with a custom, law, duty, en- .5t. To respect or attenticm; favor. H. Fawcett Font. Econ. bk. i, ch. 12. [macm. '65.] gagement, or ceremony. 2. Any common custom, form, II. i. 1. [Rare.] To express a judgment or opinion; 2, p. [F., service, rite, or practise; a traditional form or custom- comment: sometimes with om or ?/pon. 2t. To take no- < LL. obstaaulmn., < L. obsto, stand before, < ob, before, ary act. 3. [Rare.] Heedful attention; observation. tice; be heedful. [< F. observer, < L. observo, < ob, + sto, stand.] tiefore, -(- servo, keep.^ Synonyms: see barrier; impediment. Indeed, the more forcibly you are struck with improprieties and attend, attend to, . — ob'»':;.«v i"".".' ,, ^ * • - ob"stet-ri'cIan, T? „ u^ St- ^ .L , . . , . eb stet-rish'an. n. Med. A nracti- by law or euatom. From immeasurable distances m the material universe, the o6- tionpr nf midwifprv an«m aCCOUCheur.«/-*.Mn^h«./J Ob-Stet^rtst^.j.^ l*«i/-t #* ob-serv'aiit, ^b-zgrv'ant, a. 1, Paying careful atten- sertw- of the Stan, brings back word that the nhvsical forces which ^kI/Z^.L?. rule our neig-hborhood maintain an alUpervading enerirj-. Ob''«tet-ri'clpUst, a. Of or pertaining to obstetrlcs; as- tion; having the faculty of readily observing; quick to slstfnK parturition. Bancroft United States vol. v, cli. 48, p. 65. [l. b. a co. 78.1 notice; watchful; perceptive. ob-8tet'r!cs, §b-8tet'ncs, ar,^+ oameSnme Mas observicer.oR<*FRvirFn n. The branch of medical In one sense love is blind, in another it is aW'Observant. science concerned with the treatment and care of wom- Edna Lyall ch. '87.] ob-serv'er-slklp, n. The office of an observer. Knight'Errant 13, p. 111. [a. en during pregnancy and parturition; midwifery, ob- 2. Strict in observing mies or customs; heedful of du- ti^orbeheeu; regardful of au.hority.' " airy"a'^i^nUvl;' 'qSIo'^'i^e^erB^;^^^^^^ A female ohstetrieian. > s Moman was more devoutly o6«!r«an( of the authonty of Holy • OD'»ll-na-oy, eb'sti-na-si, ant — ob-Berv'Ina-.l V m/v «. 1 , Stubboni adherence Scnpmj, than Wesley. jsAAC TAYLOR Wesley and Methodism, vt teteagiJe'r; "> P'"-pose, opinion, or course of action, arising f mm con- pt. iii, ch. „b.8es»'t7 To Invest; beset 2. p. 302. |H. '52.J "="<"• ob-ses'slon, eb-sesh'un, n. 1. The act of vexing or 'he "esire to have one's own way, and generally 3. [Rare.] Ot>cdient; attentive. [< L,. ob8eryan{t-)s, L< L. besieging, or the state of being vexed or besiei^eC by somewhat unreasonable; pertinacity; stubbornness. 2. ppr. of obserm; see observe.] ob-serv'a-tlv(ei. he quality of some foreign personality, especially by an evil spirit, an- ^ being unyielding or diflicult to control or Synonyms : see attextivk. tecedent to possession. subdue; said especially of bodily ailments. [< LL. o*- ob-iierv'anl, n. I. [()] An Observantlne. 2. [Rare.l stlnuaa, L. ohsllnaliis; One strict la complylnn with Obsession signltles the Influence of an external spirit dis- < see obstinate.] rules of practise. 3t. A ob'sll-llalc, slavish or sycophantic attendant. A careful observer. tingulshed from possession bv a demon that has taken up eb'eti-netor-net, a, 1. Stubiiomly and un- 4t. ... „>.„,,„ ,.,.„.ij ,.„,. wi.,. .L.„i , Its abode wlthlil one. With Spiritualists It _ reasonably Ob-serv'ant-lne, jb-zgrv'ant-in, C. (eb'zjjr-van'tin, means possession adherent to one's own opinions or purposes; of one's consciousness by a foreign personality, E. W.), n. Ch. Hist. One as in a seer unyielding to argument or entreaty and resolutely bent of the Franciscan monks of or trance state. the stricter rnle who separated from on having one's own way, with little or no regard to the Conventual (15th The medium's by century), embracing obsession spirits is often so thorougrh that mind the wishes or views of others: also, resulting from and lie/vrmed, Akantarineis, and Becol- and body alike succumb to their influence. showing obstinacy; as, obstinate opposition. UeU. [< OBSERVANT, n., 1.] Ob>8erv'ant-i8t}. HOWELLS Undiscovered Countrych. lb, p. 235. [H.H.ftCO. '80.] ob-aerv'ant-l)', eb-zgrv'ant-li, adv. In an observant It was a troubling morbid obses«oii, the influence he [Byron] ' I shall talk of what I like,' she said wilfully, claspinff her hands round manner; with careful heed; attentively. had over all. W. URAIIAH in Nineteenth Century Nov., '93, p. 759. her knees with the gesture of an obstinate child. MRS, ob^ser-va'llon, eb'zgr-ve'Bhun, HuMrHKY Ward David Grieve bk. iii, eb. 8, p. 340. [macm. '82.] n. 1. The act, 2. The act of compassing about; siege. [< L. obses- power, or habit of observing or taking notice: 2. Hard to control or subdue, or the act of sio(n-), < obsessus, pp. of obsiiieo, besiege, < ob, before, to cure or remove; as, perceiving of ' or fixing the powers of sense or intellect on sedeo, sit.] m\fA)st.iiiate swelling. [< OF. obstinat, < L. obstinafvs, anything: formerly of obfifirio, contrasted with introspection; as, a ob-sld'1-an, eh-sid'i.an, n. An acid glassv volcanic pp. resolve. < ob, before, + Ho, et,and.j movement too quick for observation. rock, usually black Synonyms: eontumacious, decided, detemilued, dopged, | firm, lixcd. licadstrontr, heady, Imniovahle. Indomitable, In regard to observation, which seemg to be the easiest of men- and liaving the com- in- ficxlbk', intractable, nmlish, olniurate, opinionated, tal operations, we are Uu(cht by experience to rank it amooff the persist- position of rhyolite rnt. pcrtlnaeUms, refractory, rarest. h. P. Whipplk Success essay ix, p. 239. [O. A CO. 71.] | resohiie, resolved, stubborn, or trachyte, but con- uiicoiHinerable. unfilnching unyleldlnx. Scientific The headstrong 2, scrutiny of a natural phenomenon, espe- pcisuu Is taining few or no 1 not to he stopped In his own course of action. cially a visible fact ' or phenomenon, for experiment, veri- individualized crys- while the ohNtiiHite and stnbborji Is not to be driven to fication, or measurement aiH.tlnr's way. Tlu' and calculation; also, the record tals. It was used headstrong act; the obstinate and styb- of each iiitrti may simply refuse stir. an examination and the calculations connected by primitive peoples to The most amiable person be <)h'

obstiiiation 131$ oeea§ion

obstinate refuBal. The itnyieldinq ronduct which we ap- ob-teni'per, ©b-tem'pfir, r^ To comply with; obey; L. obiusus (see obtuse) + lingua, tongue.] ob-tu'^sl* it\ffexibli>, rf^j^'iiut*:: that prove we call tiecided, firm, which jspecifically {Smnbran(t-}s, ppr. oiobumb/v, shade over, < 06, over, — /*. ob-ten"e-bra'tiontj umbra, sliade.] ob'^sti-na'tiout. n. Obstinacy. ob-teu^siont, n. The act of obtending. + obstinate; hardened. ob^Htined^ a. Made ob-ieu'tioQ'*', n. The act of obtaining; obtalnment. ob-um'brate, ©b-um'bret or -bryt, a. Zool. Over- ob^Nii-pnie*. rt. To fill up, as chinks; stop up. hung; concealed under ob-te«t', Hl)-test'. r lArchalc.) I, t. 1, To address with some projecting part, as the ab- n. 1. I^tthoL Obstinate constipation; ob^Hii-pa'tion^* earnest entreaty or appeal; beseech for aid; conjure; as. to domen in some spiders.— oh-um'bralet, vt. To cloud costlvi-iK'ss The act of stopping up, as a passage. 'Zt obtc/U the saints. *2. To make the object of earnest en- or shade over.— ob"uni-bra'tiont, n. ob-Htrep'er-oiii*. eb-ialrep'vr-us, a. Making: a great treaty; supplicate for; beg earnestly; ae, he obtested the ob-unVoust, a. Extremely hooked or crooked. outcry or ilif*turt)ance. or (jivcn to doing so; boisterous; favor of Heaven. 3. To Invoke as a witness. o'bns, O'biis. n. {¥.] 1, A small bomb or shell. 2. A noisv; clamorous; as, an ofMtfreperou^ child; obstt-eperous II. I'. To protest; present urgent objections. [< OF. ob- mortar mounted on a gun-carriage, fitted for throwing amusement. [< LL. obstreperwi, < h, obgtrepo^ clamor tester, < L. obtestor, < ob, before, -|- testis, witness.] cartouches, how^itz-er:: ©"bu'^sier't. ob-tes'tatet, r. To obtest. eb-val'et al, < ««fa/*'i pyramid. [< L. obtrvneatuty pp. of obtrun- la obttructM by fallen trees; the passage or liquid through 2. Hence, an independent but complemental view of the a tube Is obttructed by solid deposits. We may hinder one's CO, < ob, tierore; and see truncatb.I same fact or thing; also, an opposite face of the same advance by following and clinging tn him; we ob»truct his — ob-trun'cate, a. Shortened by cutting off a factor truth. course by standing In his way or putting a barrier across hts part.— ob^tru n-ea'tlon, n. The act of truncating. The extreme of path. Se«' CHECK: hivder.— Antonyms: accelerate, ad- — ob'triin-<'a''tor, n. despair and doabt can only exist as the obverse vance, aid. di^ar. faillitale. forward, free, further, open, of the highest certitude, and is in fact necessary to it. ob-tra'i*Ion, ^?b-irn'zhun, n. The act of obtniding; as, p«ve the way for. proinute. Cairo Kant vol. ii. bk. i, ch. IS, p. 12&. [hach. '80.] the otUrueUm of his views was uncalled for. LL. ob- ~ ob-Htruct'er, ob-stmct'or, n. [< 3. l/>gic. The negative judgment inferred from the truekin-), obtru^us; see obtrusive.] ob^nlruf'tion* eb-strnc'sbim, n. 1. That which ob- < L. positive by obversion. — ob-trn^alon-lat, n. An obtruder; especially, )ttructi« : anything tnat occucries a road^ passage, or course, ob-ver'^iilon, eb-vtr'shmi, n. 1. A turning down or one who acts on the principle of obtruding himself and so as to r»ider progress dtfficait or impossible; an im- toward; esixftiaily, a tuming and presenting of the front )ii» opinions on others. pedimeDt; blodrance; obstacle. or principal side. 2. Lome. Immetliate mference by ob-tru'Mlv, -ly, -neaa. Obtrusive, etc. Phil. Soc. Th» dighteat ob^ruetkm ta Us path, the least injtutke, mU or reciprocal change of i>ositive and privative conceptions. fancied, rendered him frantic. ob-lru'alve, Qb-trQ'siv. a. Tending to obtrude: ob- ob-vert',ob-vgrt', vt. 1 . To turn the front or principal A. H. Xackknuk fteHi Jomea vol. U. eh. ». p. 2». [h. TS.] truding. [ < L. obt^iuus, pp. of obtrvdo; see obtrude.] side of (a thing) toward any person or object; as, to 3. The act of preventing pi op ess or accomplishment, A mUly mltared woman, like a r«ally cultttred man, U all the obvert a looking-glass to the sun. 2. Logic. To con- either wholly simpler and the leia obtrumive for her knowledge. OT in part; the act of blocking or hinder- vert or infer by obversion. L. obverto, < ob, toward, Oeobos Euot JEMayR, SiUg yoveU p. 116. [r. a w. [< ing, especially of vexatiouslv hindering progress In a '83.J + verfo, turn.] iMslative assembly by facOous opposituin. The Synonyms: see mbddlksomb. 3t. ob'vl-ate, ob'vi-fit, vt. [-a'ted; -a'ting.] 1 . To meet — ob-tru'alTe-lf, o^fr^.—o b-trn'slve-neaa, n. oimirced cessation of the bodily fDocuons; death. in such a way as to dispose of or remove; clear away or see at ob-tnnd'. eb-tund', tt. [Archaic] To render blunt or Synonniu: bar *b; impkdimbkt. provide for, as an objection or difficulty. 2t. To en- ob-Mtracrtloii-lat,eb-stroc'8htni-tst,n. persoD who dull; hence, to reduce the violence or sharpness of ; es- A counter or meet. [< LL. obviatus, pp. of obvio, meet, otMtructa, especially who opposes obstacles to reform, or pecially, to deaden or render insensible to pain: an old < L. obriitg; see obvious.] —ob^vi-a'tlon, n. The who delays the medical nse; as, an obtunding dose. pn^ress or boslness in a IcgiBlature; a act of obviating, or the state of being obviated. hinderer; an nbstru^ve.— ob-ntrue'tlon-lsiii. n. TWtr [the mathematics'] beit rcatdta would be more efff^ctually Synonyms: sec precliub. aooomplWMd, if tha inlollecto of fewer of the uamathematical hjr ob-«lrart'lTfo, 9b-«troct'lv, a. Sening or tending to ob'vt-ous, eb'vi-us, «. 1. Immediately evident with- aatare were leas pervereringlj bewitdered obstruct; causinj? stmpage or rendering progress alffi- and obtunded by the proloagad lafliction of hc^tekaa tasks and deoMNMtrations. out reasoning or investigation, or at least without further cult; as. f/Mtrnctice ucUcs. — slruot^tT(e*ljr, ob- Poktbb Amterieait CotUgee cb. S. p. 81. [swj reasoning or investigation; pertecDy manifest; easily and I'/r.— ob-atraot'lT(e*neii0, «. plainly to be perceived; course [< L. obtundo* < ob, against, 4- tunda, beat.] palpably true; as. the of ob-Mtru('l'l«'(e, n. One who or that which obstrncts. duty IS obvious. Standing placed in the — ob-lund^nt. f. a. Blunting; deadening. II. 2t. or way; oVMtru-eiit,eb'stra-vnt,a. Causing obstmction or fm- hence, either exposed to accident or damage, or present- n. 1 . An oily mucilage used to prevent soreness from Dedimenl; obstructive: used especial^ In medlcfaie. [< ing itself chafing. S. In dentisvy, an application to deaden the as a duty for attention and performance. [< L. ob^ruen{t')0y ppr. of obttrw; see obstruct.] L. obvius, in the before. nvr\'e of a tooth. ob-tund'er. n. That wliich ob- way. < ob. + t'iCj way.] ob^atra-ent, n. A medicine that acts as an obstruc- — seecLKAR; manifest; notorious. tunds or blunts; especially, in medicine, an obtundent.— Synonyms: tion, e'ijx'ciallv in iMwenting motion through the ducts — ob'vl-oiiet-lv, adv.— ob^vl-ous-ness, n. ob-tnnd'l-ty, n. A state of dulnesA or Ineenstbitlty: or r iKiriii. I-* uf the body by clewing their orifices. ob'vo-lute, ob'vo-lnt or-Iint, a. Covered over: said, in said of sensory nerves or parts. ob-Miii"pf-rnr'tlont, n. The act of stupefying, or the botany, of tfie margins of leaves or petals in veniation ftJit'- '<{ ob'ta-rmte, ©b'tia-rfit, rt. [ra'ted; -ra'ting.] To \»\x\u s(ii[>efled; stupefaction —ob-Hta^i^>fa'* which are mutually infolded one within another, and ap- ripiii*^, (J. Causing stupefaction; narcotic. ob>sta^9e* close or stop up: specifically said of stopping the breech plied particularlv to two plicate leaves in which one half rHr'ltvp+.— ob-«tu'»e*fyt, vt. To stupefy. of a gnn. [< L. obturaiuSy pp. of obturo, close.] 18 interior and the other half exterior: a form of convo- ob-laln't ^b-t^n'. c. I. / 1. To brittg into one's own ob^tu-rm'tlon, eb'tiu-rfi'shun, n. The act of closing, or lute. See illus. under convolute. [< L. obvolutus, pp. possession ; procure, especially by effort, whether for tem- state of being closed; in pathology, the abnormal closure of obvo/ro: see obvolvent.] porary or permanent porposes; acquire; get; as, he has of a canal or cavitr of the body; In ordnance, the act of ob-volv'ent, ob-velv'ent. a. Curving downward or in- obtained the appointoient. stopping the breecn of a gun to prevent the esc^ie of gas. ward, as elytra. [ < L. ofnvlrenit)s, ppr. of obvolvo, wrap Oflsn as I an appsalu j to to spaak, or otherwise aisisl la lbs oVtu-ra^tor, ob'liu-rf-'t^r. n. 1, A structure tnat around, < ob, iK-fore, volvo, roli.]^ ob-volv'iiifft> wmnMatk of Um caass of Woowa, my answer is ahnqrs Um mbm: closes or shuts off a cavity or passage; especially, in -f- Um» womsw. Hh* maa, caa oAtetfa whatomr_f tbevtbey show thiiassbiitbsMsalvas €>'by, n. Same a« onii.— o'by-lsm, n. anatomy, the membrane, vessels, and the like, closing the •I tor. Hauutt MAnUTBAU AmUMogropkt vol. t. period Iv. oe-, prefijr. Assimilated form of ob- before c. See ob-. |S,p.3as. {o.aco. 77.] obturator foramen. 3. Ordnance. Any device to check o'cR, O'co. n. [S.Am.] Either of two Peruvian plants of the Bat far more ctoriooa were oar aims, — we vowed the escape of gas at the In^eech or from the vent of a genus Oralis — O. crennta and (). tuberosa — tX\& former The noUe walb of Bioa to o6fa<*'oatn-lte,n. 3t. To reach; arrive: atuin: followed by to. [< F. ob- apprehension; stupid; also, dull in feeling; lacking s<'n- oc'ca-iiiy+, 71. An alloy resembling silver: a corruption of tenir. < L. obtitim. < ob, be- alchernr/. och'i>myt. sibitity. 4. Heavy and indistinct, aa a sound ; not shrill fon*. 4- t^HHi, hold.) oe-ca'ition, (?c-ke'zhun. vt. 1 , To cause or bring about or sharp. [< L. obtvetie, pp. ot oUundo; sec obtund.] Synonyms: m>v Acqciai; by furnishing the condition or occasion needed Tor the : see blunt. ATTAI.\: liAlS; Synonyms OET. — ob-tune^tan'^aled, a. Containing an obtuse angle: action of a principal cause; cause accidentally or inci- ~ob- lMln'«-ble, a. jd especially of triangles.— o.iangalnr. n. Ilavlnj^ dentally, or simply to cause or bring alxtut; as. your care- ob-talnVr.rt.— ob-laln'* forming an obtuse angle -••ellipsoid._ Hot. Elllp- lessness has ocx^affio/teU gi-eat trouble. 2t. To furnish /* sold In form with obtuse extremities. ment. The act of obtain- The Obteoted Pnpa of inducement for; lead to or necessitate. [ < LL. orcaMonOy ing or attaining. Sphinx tiffuetri. ob-liiKf'ly. ^h-tins'Ii, ad) . In an obtuse manner; es- eing caused rir-nt i>r th«> abdtmw'n; e. ad- iH'int; ribtuw; diilnese; stupidity', ob-trrt'ed, ob-ti-ct ' fi. n. ob-tu'sl-tyt. or occasioned.— oc-ea'Nion-er. n. iiirii'iils; uiutTo, or point (overe*! with sonu-thiiiK; ^-^ /. ob-tii''i»l-lo'll-ou«, Qb-tiQ'»i-fO'li-UB. o. Hot. Hav- oc-ea'filon, n. 1. A particular event, or juncture of f thf tail. peciallv. in entotnokigy, cov- ing obtiiHcIv iM»iiited leaves. [< L. obtugtis (see obtube) events, considered simply as exciting notice or interest; ered with a cliitinoos case, as the pupie of most flies -\-J'f)li>im. feaf.] especially, an important event or celebration. ob-tu'^Ml-lln'irual, Qb-tiD'si-liQ'gwai, a. Having a 1 < \.. ntitt^rtuM. pp. of oMspOt ooDoeal, < o6, over, -f ttgo. There are occasions when man acquires courage from despair. obtuHe at the apex, as some andrenid l>ee8. ii, [s. '80.] veil. I ob*tecr;. tongue \< McCosH Emotions bk. ch. 2, p. HI.

aa = out; •!!; lfl=fn«l, |9 s future; c^sk; church; dh =

ocra»ilonal 1316 ocean

8. An e%*ent or juncture of affaire that presents some oc-clp'^-ta'ltei, ©celp'i-te'lie or -ty'lis. «. [-les, pl.'\ dieting the future; hence, loosely, astrology and its prac- reason, motive, or opportunity for action; hence, either An occipital muscle. [< L. ocHput; see occipital.] tisos. Compare MAGIC. 3. Modem theoeophy as claim- an opportunity permuting or a reason rtH^uiring action; occlplto-, ocolult*. Derivetl from Latin ocHput (eee ing a divine illumination and a eupersensitiveness to a ground of domg &» offered by or obtiiniable fnmi a occipital*:- conihiiiing forms. — oe-flp"i-(o-an'^ii-lar, mental and spiritual impressions. Compare astral. given case; hence, also, in old usage, any miitler of busi- Of or ixTtalnitiK to the occipital lofte and the angular oc-cult^tst, ec-cult'ist,«. One who professes or practises requiring attention; as, there is no occasion for convolmliui of the bram.— oc-eip''i-ln-at-lan'lal, «. any form of occultism of oriKTtalnlugto the occiput and the atlas: as, the oo<-/p(7o. haste; he tooK ocom^oh to present his request; he is -»*,/«„.«« n.«v t^r'vii nnn ai « i The act of takinji occupied with his own oeeaeions. o-nx'i>al, a. Of or pertaining to the occipital bone and Specifically, in law 2i«w occasioiis tv&ch n«w diiti««: Time makes ancieot Rood un- the a.\l8; as, the ocripttrxixinl llgjinients. oi*-clp''i-lo- (1) The taking or being in possession of corporeal prop- couth. LowKLL The Present Crisis st. 18. ax'oidj.— oc-cip"i-l«»-cei*'vi-eal, a. Of or pertain- erty that belonged to nobody with the intention of he- 3. A condition that opens the way for the production of ing to the occiput aiui tin- lu-rk; as, the ocripiiocerrical coming the owner of it. ligament.— oc-cii>^'i-t— III I'll iiLi^ii.a. Ofv'l or\'i pertainingi/i I intiiiiig to\,\j theiiiic acQuIredin;quiri;u byuy reducingii-uin iiig Itii tolu actualaCl possession. occasio(n'), < occasu^, pp. of occido; see Occident.] " occiputut and the chin; iis. the' occipllomenUii see cause; opportunity. diameter of the o<*Vu-paut.<'Vu-pant, ec'yu-ixmtec'yu-ixmt, nn. 1. One who occupies; es- Synonyms: ln«(l " — by occasion of* In consequence of; by reason of.— ,"L» JS\",?;r°Jr„S;'l?-i?:S":V^:.l-l'''' '' P',,^"' Pecially. a tenant in posses on o.« on suitable opportunity; at different thnes.— to lo-phar'^in-ffe^us. [-ge'i. pL] muscle passing o.v to avail oneself of the opportunity, or to use some A take froin the biislocclnl'tal to the "^^^ occupies and claims property that is without an state of affairs as a suitable opportunity. plia'rvnx.-^oc-eip"i-tor- bic^u-lar, «. Of or pertaining to the occiput and an or- owner. 2t. A prostitute. [F., < L. occifjxi f (t-ys, ppr. oc-ea'olon-al. ^c-ke'zhunul, a 1, Occurring more i bkular muscle.- oc-cip"i-to-8cnp'u-lar,«. Of or per- of occupo, occupy, < ob, to, -}' capio^ take.] or less freq^nently, but not at fixed or regular times; hap- tabling to the occI^)ut and the scapula- a.s, an occipitoncapu- oc'cu-patet, a. Occupied. pening at internals as opportunity serves or occasion re- /«ruiuscle-oc-cip''i-io-»cap''u-hi/ris,w. [-REs,«n oc''ca-pa'tlon, oCyu-pe'shun, n. 1. That which quires; with here and there or An occ,plto»caj,„,ar met now and then; as, an -'-'--KiK'-'JJ-jhe^nord, principally take-up one'e time, tho„ght,,and energies Of or pertaining to the occipital and sphenoid bones.— occflwtona/ thunder-storm; an oc^fc^/io/ pedler. especially, one's regular business oc-cip"i-to-tem'uo-ral,«. Of or pertaining to the oc- or employment; also, An occftsional discord has it« use and oharm. cipital and temporal lobes of the cerebrum; as. the occipito- whatever one follows as the means of making a liveli- E. C. Stedxan Victorian I^tets ch. 127. [o. '76.] 4, p. ft CO. temporal convolutions.— oc-cip''i-to-tein''po-ro-pa- hood; as, they were sailmakers by occupation. 2. The 2. Of or belonging to some special occasion; as, an oc- a. Of pertaining to, ri'e-tal, , ordeslgniitlng a division of act of occupying; a taking or keeping possession; occu- casional sermon. 3t. Being or belonging to a merely the cerebrum including the occipital, temporal, and parietal pancy; tenure; as, theocc-tf;?a/io« of acity. S.Theetate lobes. determinative condition; pertaining to an occasion as or condition of being employed, occupied, or kept busy in oc'cl-put, oc'si-put, n. 1 . The lower back part of the oppostxl to theprincipal and efficient cause. [< LL. any way; as, continual occupation is wearisome. 4+. head; the region of the occipital bone; hindhcad. See occasionalis, < L. occasioin-); see occasion, n.] Use and profit, or waste by reason of use. [F., < L. oc- illus. under bird. Synonyms: see incidental. 2, Entom. The part of the dorsal cupatio{n-), < occvpo: see occui-ant.] — ocea«ioiial cauHp, Philos. 1, condition or oc- wall of the head that articulates A with the anterior margin Synonyms: occupancy, possession, tenure, use. See casion nccfs-saryforan event, but which ,. yet exerts no .power of the prothorax. [L.; see occipital.] BtsiNKSs; , , . ,. „ , . V. ^ ^ ^ EXERCISE.- Antonyms: dispossession, eject- in the production It: of distinguished from f^fflcient cause, oc-ci'siont, n. A killing; the act of ktlling. ment, eviction, resignation, vacating. *'*' occlude', eC-Clfld', Vt. [OC-CLU'DED; an ^'rii';,«*r^ia S«*^^'**ri"^'"- 1 1 «, rri, OC-CLtj'DlNG.] —army of occupation, army that Invades an Derivatives : - oc-ea'slon-al-lsm, n. The enemv's country establlshi'S i . chem. & Physics. To absorb, as a gas by a metal.«»• and Itself there, either tem- ' Cartesian doctrine that the changes that take place in - V &j porarily or pemiauently.—o. a bridge Hydrogen was found by Graham in abundance occluded in mete- bridge, connecting mind and body in the apparent interaction of the two are two part* of an estate separated by a roadway or waterwav. oric niassee. F.A. P. Harnard in harper's jVoH^ft/y Dec., '76, p. yy. not the causes of each other, but occasions the occur- — oc^'^cu-pa'tlon-alf a. Of or pertaining to an on 2. [Rare.] To shut up or close, as pores or openings. rence of which in one the Divine Being produces corre- occupation; slu., occupational statistics.— oe"eu-pa'- There was scarcely a port in Europe, which, at the commence- sponding in the other: tloii-ert, n. One who is engaged in occupation changes bastnl on the denial of ment of our restrictive Bystem, was not occluded to British com- some or business.— the possible interaction of mind and body merce. Calhoun Works, Apr. 6, '/i in vol. ii, p. 106. [a. '63.] oc'cu-pa-tlv(e, a. Deriving validity from or held by right of occupation; Geultnx, the Cartesian, developed the theory of occasionalism. [< L. occludo, < ob, before, + clavdo, close.] as, an occupatire or the doctrine that on the occasion of each psychical process God ' tenure; an occupative property. n<'-rlll'd<*llt fvp-rlil'df^nt I.M. a.U'. lt:il\lltlU or\>1 servingBCl villi' UI '«« ' ' ^ effecto the correspondin(( Tending to ,_ *y*>. ^ motion in the body. Uebkrweg Uist. 6''' One lias Vln^Vnr^\^^^close or shutsliutfhnt up..irT II.II.?,.1 w w.,/ That whicli has tlie effect of "•'.•"'P*'"'' «"^y"-r«' "• 1 • who posses Philos. XT. by G. S. Morris vol. ii. § IH, p. 42. [S. '74.] occupant. closing or shutting up, as a physical or medical agent. '*'°"' ?° 2. One who takes possession of The theory of oc^«/orm/r«i. sprang especiallyVrora the difficulty ^^"^^^^^^^^ ^f^fll'lj; a. or ownerless land and so establishes a claim upon it. 3t. of comprehending the interaction of soul and bciiy. OC-clu»e't,c-cluse't, «. Shut up closedclosed. ec-cln'zhun, One who follows any business or calling. One who B. P. BoWNE Metaphysics pt. i, ch."4, p. 116. [h. '82.1 oc-rlu'Mion, n. 1 . Pathol. The closing 4t. employs any property in trade or business. -oc-ca^lon-al-t8t,n.— oe-ca''8ion-al^l>ty,n. or shutting up of an opening, pore, passage, or cavity, 2. Chem. The absorbing of gases, as "c, «n-Py> ^^'y-PO^ < [pied; -pVing.] \. t. l.Toflll [Rare.] The quality, state, or condition of being occa- by metals; the condition of being occluded. the space, time, or capacities of; use or employ in an ex- sional; also, an occasional occurrence or happening. [< L. occlusris, pp. of oc- cludo; see occlude.] clusive manner; engage; as, to occwpy a cabin or an hour. oc-ca'slon-al-ly,at/t'. 1. In an occasional manner; — oeclnsion of gn^es* the absorption by metals of Adam Smith occiipied ten years in producing his ' Wealth of more or Jess frequently, but not at regular times or inter- certain definite quantities of gases capable of entering Into Nations.' H. L. Colukb Every'Day Sut^ects p. 24. [a- U- a.] vals; sometimes, not often. 2t. Accidentally, or on conibliiation with them. occlusion Such of gas yields a 2. To take and hold possession of; have in possession some special occasion. compound metal or alloy of specific qualities when ana- and use; as, the tenant occujnes the farm. 3. give oc-ca'«ion-a-tivet, a. Serving or tending to occasion; lyzed.— o. of the pupil, the closing of the pupil of the To acting as Indirect or detennlning cause. eye by reason of Inflammatory material. occupation or employment to; as, the iron industry occv- oc-ca'sivet, a. Of or belonging to the setting sun; western. — oc-clu'8lv(e, a. Closing or serving to close.— 7MC« thousands of men. 4. To be in actual possession Oc'el-dcnt, ©c'8i-d(;nt, n. 1. The countries lying west oc-clu'sor, ». [-80-RES, j)l^ That which occludes; of, as an office; fill; as, Elizabeth occujned the throne of of Asia and the Turkish dominions: opposed to Orient. especially, an organ or muscle that closes an opening in a England. 2. [o-] Thewest, as the region of sunset. [F. .,; see occupant.] hence, as relating to matters now occidental Ui Jupiter. 4. Less precious as a gem, not generally understood, the Synonyms: be in possession of, busy, employ, engage, sense gradually extended to Include all that was the best gems being supposed to come from the East. Inexpli- fill, have possession of, hold, keep, possess, preoccupy, use. cable and mysterious, and in modern times is somewhat ^^,, oc-eld'u-oust. Oc^cl-den'tal-lHnt, n. The SeCAMl'SE;„„^ ,^ .^.n,INTEREST; POSSESS. — "^ mysticism and esoteric philos- oc-cur',V-cOr', ri. [oc-curbed' ; spirit, life, and methods of the people of the Occident. opuy.oTv'*' sceocciLrisM.s?S o^J", x,V«""' oc-cub'ring.I 1 . To — Oc'^cl-den'tal-lst, n. person ^^^^ ^^^ ^y^. ^ ^^^^^_^^ here and there; appear; hence, 1. A of Asiatic The religion of Titian is like that of Shakspere — occuK behind to happen or take place; become a fact; befall; as, mis- blood who admires and advocates Occidental ways of his magnincent equity. RusKiN Modem Painters vol. v, pt. ix, ch. 240. takes occur every thinking and doing: opposed to Orientalist. 2. One 3, p. [w. * s. '75.J on page, versed in the institutions, languages, and history of the 2. Perceivable onl^ by methodical investigation; not No, they have no railroad accidents to speak of in France. But why ! Because when one occutv, somebody has to han^ for it I Occidental nations. — Oc^'el-den'tal-lze, vL To immediately or easily known; as, the occult powers of MARK Twain Innocents Abroad ch. 12, p. 110. [am. p. co. '70.] render Occidental in spirit or character. Oc"ei-den'- nature. 3. Theos. Hidden from material eyes; visible 2. To arise in or present itself to the mind, as a recollec- tal-l«et.— Oc"cI-den'tal-ly, at/t?. In the West or only to those with spiritual sight. [< L. occultus, pp. of Occident; tion, idea, proposition, or proposal; be spontaiieously in an Occidental manner. occtdo, hide, < oft, before, -f- root seen in celo, hide.] Oc''cl-den'tal, n. 1. One born or living in a Western Synonyms: see mysterious. thought of or conceived; as, it occurs to me that it is or Occidental country. — occult line (Gcom.), a line drawn In the construction dinner-time. 3. [Archaic] Eccl. To conflict with one of a figure, but erased before the completion of the figure.— another as to celebration: said of movable and immov- The Occidentals led by Macaulay had too complete a victory for the^ood nf India. o. qualities {Anc. Philox.), qualities whose existence Is able feasts. 4t. To collide; clash: the original mean- manlff^st to the senses, but whose nature Is ascertainable. ST K. GbanT Duff in Contemporary Review Sept., '91, p. 331. ing of the word. 5t. To refer to for the purpose of an- If at all, only by scientific Investigation and inference. 2. Eccl. One of the Latin or Occidental Church, swering: followed by to. as dis- In retfard to their essence or occult qualities, we know quite as The transitive meaning of ' running to. going to the help tinguished from a Greek or Oriental Christian. little al)out matter as we do about mind. of,' is a rare Latin use, and entirely obsolete in English. oc-elp'l-tal, ec-sip'i-tal, a. 1. Of or pertaining to the ABKRCROMBIE Intellectual Powers pt. i, § 1, p. 28. [r. b. c. '56.1 [< L. occui-ro, < ob, upon, cunv, run.] occiput or lower back part of the head; as, -f- the occipital — o. syllogism, a syllogism having one or more of Its "*'"'''''• bone. 2. Of, pertaining to. or situated near the occipital "'""^'*'' '»«'"<'•'' KallTlVv-'Sn^esS""'''' '" "^"""'P^^^ oc.?u°rd'!";.' OcJuYrrf."'' Phil. Soc. bone; as, the occipital condyles for articulation with the - - - oc-cur'renee, §c-cur'(;ns, n. 1 . An event considered. atlaa; the occipital lobe. 3. Having the occipital region -oe-ciilt'Iy, arfr.— oc-cult'ne«», n. not as bein^ brought about, but simply as presenting it- relatively large. L. occi- oc'^cul-ta'tlon, ec'ul-te'shun, n. 1. The act of oc- [< self to notice; an unexpected or unsought event; a hap- put (0(xipit-), hack portion culting, or the state of being occulted; especially, con- pening; as, a fortunate occurrence. of the head, < ob, about, cealment of one body by another interposed in the line + Every occurrence in Nature is preceded by other occurrences caput, head.] of vision, as of a star or planet by the moon, or of a sat- which are its causes, and succeeded oy others which are its effect*. — occipital a ellite by a planet. Compare eclipse. 2. disappear- bone, bone A Tyndall Forms of Water g 1. p. 1. [a. '72.] of the occiput; the hlitdmost ance from public view or notice. bone of the Hkull. through which 2. The happening or taking place of an event; as, the After a long period of occultation ... he f the Dnke of Shrews- frequent occurrence of crime. the continuation of the spinal bary) a^n took his place in that assembly of which he had once cord passes by an aperture been the brifrbtest ornament. The Christian miracles were originally believed under such cir- (foramen magnum or occipli^l Lecky Eng. in Eighteenth Cent. vol. i. ch. 1, p. 63. [a. '78.] cumstances that this belief can only be explained by their (u^tual or- foramen). In man and currence. other [< L. occulfritio(n-), < occido; see occult.] CHanning Works, Ei-idences of Rei-ealed Religion mammals It consists at birth p. 230. [a. u. a. '83.] — circle of perpetual occultation, that portion of of four separate plec«>s — a Imsi- the heavfiiH no piu-t of which risen abovt' the 3. Eccl. The falling of two holy days on the same date. lar (baslocclpital), lobular horizon of a (su- place: opposed to the circle ofperpetitol apparition. praocclpltal), and two condy- [< L. occurren{t-)s, ppr. of occurro: see occur.] ec-cult'izm, lar pieces (cxoccipitalH), which c-cult'lsm, n. 1 . Originally, experimen-expe: Synonyms: see case; circumstance; event. tal science, oc-cur'reut, a. ^ Happening at the afterward unite.— o. pointt a or the science that investigates the occult gc-cur'tnt, [Archaic. The Occipital Bone. time, or event; aa, point on the occipital bone In qualities of nature; hence, the investigation of any mvs- P''*^*"-'"^ contemporaneously with another occnrrent aid. L. occur- the inettial plane farthest re- ba, basilar process or bafli- teriouB things, especially those that are supernatural. Vl^!})'',}^ll?^':JZf'r^l'J}^^^^ [< -. . • , teiixt-ih. set (JCv. L RRE]NCE, moved occipital; c. c, condyles; J-, , 1, .11 * 1 .V I from the ghibella be- fm, (JranlingoccuKlmnall itdaim«,willit ever produceanyeffiK't tween tlie eyebrows. foramen magnum; »4, squama of.clir'reilt+, H. An occurrence or happening, il. One — oe-elp'I-tal-ly^, adv. or ftupraoccipital. oc-elp'|.(al, n. 1. The occipital bone. 2. One of a 2. A supernatural power pretended to Ix; derived from o'reaii, O'shan. n. 1. The great body of salt water pair of head-shields on the occiput of a snake. higher beings and employed in human affairs, as in pre- that covers about two-thirds of the eartli's surface; the •ofa, firm, 9sk; at, tin, ;iccord; element, $r = over, Sight, | = usage; tin, machine, g = renew; obey, no; not, nor, atym; full, rule; bw, bom; afclc; — —

Oceanian 1317 octangle

flea as opposed to land: used also adjectively; as, the o'cher-y, O'ktr-i, a. Like ocher; ocherous. cbont. — oc^'ta-strophMc, a. Proa. Containing or of eight strophes. ocean laue. It« average depth is estimated to exceed two och faoue, Ou hon. [Ir.] An exclamation expressing lam- composed — oc'ta-style, n. Arch. Any structure miles aad a quarter, and to be six Times as ?reat as the entation, och-on'tt och-one'tt o-hone't< havlnn eight front col- umns, oc'lo-stylei.— oe'ta-style, average elevaiioD of the land'surface above the sea-level. And with my advice, faith, I wish you'd take me, «. — oc'ta-leucU, n. A colk-ctlon of Strong /outh. aa uncon- Och hone I Vfidow Machree! The ocean crfd. Centuries old. u and eight books; especially LO-], the first elcht Samuel Loveb Widow Machree st. 5. trolled. LoNGrKLU*' Buildtng of the Ship st. 30. books of the Old Testament reparaed 2. Any one of those immense tract«i of water that col- och't-dore* ek'i-d5r, n. [Local, Eng.] A shore'crab. as one compilation or series, oc'lo- och-le'sis, oc-li'sis or -le'sis, ft. Pathol. Morbid condi- A. lectively compose the great ocean, commonly enumerated teucht.— oc'la-va"lent, (oc- tion caused by overcrowding. Called also eroii>d»poison- tav'a-lent, W.),u. Chem. Having a as the Afvtic, the Antarctic, the Atiantic, the Pacific, and ing. [< Gr. ocfdlsi^^ disturbance, < octdoSy crowd.] valence or combining power of eight. the Imiian: distinguished from a sea. 3. Figuratively. See valence.— — och-lel'le, a. Of or pertaining to ochlesis. oc"ln-vn'i'i-um, n. any unbounded expanse or indefinite quantity; as, ocearus R. C. Ch. An office-book containing les- ocli-Iot'lc, a. Caused or promoted by overcrowding. of air; toased on an oc^an of doubts. [OF., <'L.oceanus^ sons, etc., for all the days of a festival och-loc'ra-ey, ec-lec'ra-si, n. Rule of the multitude; < Gr. dkeanM, ocean, perhaps < dkys, swift.] week.— oc'lene, n. Same as octyl- — o'ceaii«bn'<'Hin« » A sunken part of the surface of government by the populace; mobocracy. KNK.— oc'ti-reme, n. Aittiq. A vessel the earth concalnlnR an ocean; as. the ocean^ba^n of the From the violence and tawlessnesH of the people, in time ochloc- having eight hanks of oars.— oc'to- Atlantic, -o.ii rout. n. The menhaden. racy ~moh rule — is ent^endered. T. D. WooLSKY Political nte, H. Chein. A salt of octoic acid. Science vol. i, Called a,\BO capri/late.— oc/to-ha.n»t n. Cfe-an'l-aii, * O'shg-an'i-an, -can. a. 1. Of or per- pt, ii, ch. 9, p. 407. [8. ^S.] Mm. An Instrument of music resembling O^ce-an'l-can, ii'uinins to the islands between south- F. ocfdocratie. < Gr. oc/Uokratia, < ochlos, mob, -J- the viol; the low octave of the cello.— .\merica. sometimes called Ocea- eastern Asia and South i/. Hot. An order An to the Temple. trcTnatodcs with 8 suckers at the hinder ©"ce-an'le, 5*8hs-anTc, a. 1. Of or pertaining of polypetalous shrubs or trees — the ochnad family — ocean or an ocean; as, an oceanic island or shore. 2. PUn of the Parth^ "'«'"»f'" *^'"'>;,, Oc"t€i-bolll'ri- with watery juice, alternate simple leathery leaves, and UNI, ». '^f/''*"^(t. ji.)— oc"to-both'ri-i€l, n. similar to an ocean in extent or non Corresponding with or usually panicled flowers with 4 to 5 free sepals, 5 narrow — oc^lo-both'Ti-oid, a.— oc^'to* trade ; an o^'^anic empire. immensity; as, an 0£«amc petals, and a large succulent torus. It embraces 3 tribes, bra'cbi-ate* a. Zool. Having eljrlit arms or rays; oeto- pod.— Coleridge's eipreasion. oeeantc mind, with its impliet] idea of 12 genera, and PiO species, all tropical. Oob'ua, n. oc"to-c(e''lri-a-con"(ra-he'droH, n. O'eom, A solid having thirty-elf;ht plane faces, as a snub cube.— muUitodinoas unity, it the tmest and apteitt n^re (t. g.) [< Gr. ochn?, pear-tree.]— ooh-na'oeouK. a. riven to him jret. H. N. HUMON Lerf I Sha,kapeitre vol. oc^to-ceu'le-nn-ry, n. The elght^hundredth anniver- ocli'naa* oc'nad, n. Any plant of the order (Jchnaceae. Wt. H. p. 55. (B. a SCR. 'tt.1 sary of an event.- Oc-toc'e-ra, n. pi. Conch. The Oc- ooh'^o-pet'al-ouB, ok'o-pet'al-os, a. Bat. Having topoda. Oc'>'co-cer 'a-tat. — oc-toc'er-ou8, a.— in seas; pelagic; as, an 3. Zooi. Living the high oc«an/<; broad petals. [< Gr. ocho«, thai which holds (< ec^5, oc'to-cbordt n. Same as octachord. — Oc"lo-co- fish. [< L. o«aniM,* see OCEAN.] hold), -^petaJon, leaf.] ral'ln» h. pi. Zooph. The ^/cyoM«n'rt.— oc"to-cor'- Synonyms: see kautical. o'chra, ». SanieasoKRA. o'chro^j oVral. al-lau, n.— oc^to-f'or'nl-lln(e, a. & n.— oc'^to- — Islands far from continents; es- oreniiic i«lanrf»« o-cbra'ceouit, o-crd'shios, a. Or the color of ocher; dae'tyl, a. Having eight digits, oc^lo-dac'tyiej.— pt^lally, the Islands of Oceania. brownish-yellow. [< (khek.] oc^'to-dec^i-mnl, a. Of or pertaining to an octodeci- O*t»e-an*i-tai'ntor 0"ce;^'ni-tl'n^, ;* mo; of the size of- an octodecimo.- oc"lo-dec'i-uio.-— .™.„^ . jiiu, u. O^ce-aii^i-tl'nie. o'chre. o'chrc-oUH, o'chre-y. See ocher, etc. — — Having 36 pages to the sheet: said of a book or pamphlet. pt. fjrnith. Asubfamllmllvofif pn»cellarioid binls with only och'r«»»a, och're-nie. Set* ohru>, ot'hr-. Derive*l from pale-yel- Greek dchros^ sheet makes 18 leaves or 36 pages: usually written IHmo, ten*. H. (t. Gr. OkednileSy dweller by the ocean, g.) [< low: combining forms. —och^ro-car'pous, a. JioC. Yel- and called eighteenmo. — oc^to-den'tate* a. Having < dkeanot; see ocean.]— o^ce-m-nl'tln(c, a. & n. luw-frulted.— orchroiil, t Of the color of ocher.— o"- eight teeth or tooth-like processes.— Oc'^lo-dou'ti-die, o'^ce-aa-off'ra-jpher. O'ahe-on-og'ra-fgr or O'shan-, chro-leu'cous (och'^ro-leu'cous, C. H'.), a. Yellow- n. pi. Mum. The Spalacopodidx.— oc'ivt'iXowX^ u. & n. n. One who stnoies or U versed in oceanography. i8h-whlte. — oc^to-don'lld, «.— oc"lo-don'loid, «. & ».— Oc"- o'^c«>-nu-air'ra*»li]r. fi'sh^^n-eg'ra-fl, C. (u*shun-«K'ru-A. oVhro-llle. n'cnvlait, «. Mineral. An adamantine to-dun-ti'use* » pi. Mam. A subfamily of spalacopo- sidfur-yellow lead rhlorantimonite dold rodents with soft fur and simple enamel-folds. W.i.n. 1 liarc.] Thalassokraphy. [< Gr. dkeanoM, ocean, (PbeSb^OiCl,), crys- Oc'- ~r -oRAF'Hv.j — o*'ce-an'*©-Brapli'lr, «. Pertalnlna to tallizing in the orthorhombic system. [< ocuro- to-don, ». (t. g.)- oc^to-don'llufe, '/. & h.— oc'lo- -f coin or of tht' nature of oceanoffrspby. o'^ce-an'>'o-Brapii'- -LITE.] draehm. n. A Greek worth eljiht drachnias. See lc««l:.— o''ce-aD*«-«rapli'lc-al"ly, 'Mr. plate of coi N s. flg. 27. oc'i 11 -

aa'el-^ri.a. or pertalnlnff to ocelli; ocel- H. IKare. ) marrying of el^cht ue'el-la-ry, Of rl-id, muti- tem of plants, 4'inbraclnn those with eight pistils In a flower, spot of color within a ring lated or BLENNr. 3. UavlDg a one disguised .in hawit, niiU*. siU*. yolAr; (31 rtnluced Oc^la-Kyn'i-at*- oe-log'y-nous, a. Bot. KIght* of another; aa, an oceUateti moth. 3. Si>otle«i. [< L. to -ick, as lamcJfc (lassie). In I^>ulancl Scotch maun(M>A', pistlled. oc*taK'y*nouiittt oc'^to-Byii'i-anti oc''to« octUal't*, < oeeiltu; see ocellary.} or'el-latet; oc*'^- Uaeocir, wlfocA*, occm-; and -oit is n<»t Infn'quent In uroptr iryn'i»ou»*;.— oc''to-h«''flrnl, oc^'to-be'dron. see el-lir'er-ouai; ot'^el-lljj'er-oufcj. names, as Pollodt (Pftol), Baldoc^ (Baldwin), WllcocJt, Wil- rai.. etc.— oc^lo-lnt'er-al, a. Kfght-slded.— cox ( wmiain), IHrock ( I)artd. I>avie). etc. -uc. a. Kljrht 'Celled, as plant-capsule. 4>-4-f'l'll-c>'Ht. (»-seri-Mist, n. Zooph. An oceUiis of a [ < A8. ] oc"to-loc'u-lar, a Ock'hani*lsm« n. Same as Occamisx. oc*loiii'e-rai, '/. KlKht-parted; of or pertalnlnji to the hyilrt>zottn. {< L. ocelius itw (Xtellary) -^ Gr. kyittis; ork'ater, n. Same as oxteb, f>cfo»ifrf///f/. — Oc"io-iiie-rn'li-a, n. pi. Zonijh. A see cYST.J— o-rel'^l-cya'llc, a. o'clock', ^clec'. A contraction for of the clock, signi- 8ut>cla88 of Sci/phomeduHse tiaviUK S genital lobes and o-e«l'Ina, o-aePos. n. [u, -la) or -It, pi.] 1. A minnte mouth with 8 fying according to or by the clock; as, one o'clock. ann-tike processes. Including L'unnostoniae, aim|rieeye,a8of many invertebrates; a little eye; a stem- SemoMtomx. and ^/f/zowrnma'. — oc''to-iiie-ra'li-an, a. oc're-a, ec'rg-a, C. S. (O'crg-a, A*. /. H.), w. [-m, -! or -d, ma. 2. One of the simple eleroeata tn a compouiid ere, & 71.— oc*loni'er-oiiH, a. Octanierous.- oc'to-nal, a. 1)1.] 1. Bot. (1) A stipule or combined pair of stipules Of or pertaining to a system of eights; eonipuling as in insccta. 3. A spot of color MtrroaDded by a rmg by foifonning a legglng-shaped sheath al>out the stem. 4:^) A eights; octonan.-. — oc'^lo-napb^tb«>nfN n. them. or rings of color, aa upon many feather*, butterflies* A thin sheath around the seta of a moss: generally but er- colorless liquid bydriK-arbon (< „Hiei contained in Caucasian wings, etc.; an e3re<«pot;eTelet. n^.; •eeocBiXABT.] roneously written ochrea. 3. Zool. A sheath, as the boot p«'troleum and a member of the wtylene series.- oc"to- o'cel-old, 0'Bel-«id, a. ResemtHlng the ocelot; aa, the of a bird. 3. .\nfio. A greave or lef^ng. IL.,greave.] na'rl-aii« ». Latin Ptom. A verse composed of eight feet, oceloi^l leopard or long^taUed tlger<«at {FeH$ maerurtu) especially of eight Iambics or trochalcs; an octajxtdy. Oc*re-a'lw, »c'rg-6'ttor-g't*, n. ff. Orntth. A pha- of Houth America. [< ocblot + -oii>-1 oc^to-nare't, — oc'lo-na-ry. I. a. Using a system lanx of cichlomorphic birds with l>ooted tarsi, including of eights, or of parts members; o; oi-tasemlc— Oc'^- sepals. — oc'^tu-ttper'iiiuuH, a. Bot. KIght-seeded. ocher-like properties, as in lao>neni'l«die* n. pi. Aitdd. A deep-sea family of heini- oc'to-npore, n. Ik>t. One of the eight carpt)spores into consistency or color. myarbm tunlcates, having a discoid >M*dy with eight Uper- which the ot^onlum In certain florldeous algse nreaks up o'chrej. Ing marginal processes. Oc'^iac-ne'muH, «. (t. g.)~- after Impregnation.— oc'lo-Hpo'^rouH. a. Bot. Having o'elier, (n. X.Mineral. A u<'^tac*iii>'iiiid* « — oc"tar-iM*'inold, n.— oc''|a- eight spon's.— oc-toH^ii-choUH, (/. Bnt. Klght-ranked; rol'ie, '/. .\>ir. PritH. <'onipo>.r.i of .lnht rola or portions having organs or leaves arnuiged In eight vertical ranks or o'l-hre, \ native earth vary- of amt'irlral iMThxI.— oc-tnc'li-nnl, n. KIghi-rayed; of rows.- oc'to-Ntylts a. Same as or tahtylk.- oc"lo- iiii; from light yellow to de«p or pertalnInK to the 'A-Zar/i/i/ar.— Or"tnc-lln'l-w, «. ^^ 9yl-lab^ic. I. a. Composed of eight syllables, oc^lo- oraiiire or brown, and con- Zotfph. Ihv Alryounria. Clc^tac-lln'l-at.- oc''ta-<»'- Hyl-iab'lf*-altt oc''lo-Hyl'ln-bl II. "• A vei-se -i^ting of inm peroxki and chos, n. An office-book of the tJreik Church, containing i)r llnetliuscomposed.— oc''to-Hyl'ln-bl(e, n. An eight* "n*^" ^*''"'- wau-r with varying proper- ' « the lltuncy and certain vespers.— oc'^tn-e^drnl* oc'^la* syllabled word.— oc'to-teucb* n. isame as oc:tatkuch. tions of clay In inipafpaDle sabdivlslon, largchr used as a e'drlte* ac^ta>e'dron. See octaiiedkal. etc.— oc"- oc'tad, ec'tad, a. Chem. Having a combining power of n. fast days plgn>ent and as a paint, according to Its mMcloilUy with ta*«M'er-on« Or. Ch. A lasting eight before eight; octavalent. a sreac festival.— oc'^ta-«*(er'l«, n. At Athens, a cvcic oiL 3. Any metsJlic oxid occurring in an eartliy or pul- or'tad, n. A series of eight; specifically, in chemistry, of eight yearn, divided Into 99 lunar months, the third, fifth, because an at^im, radical, or element that has verulent form. 3. [Siang. Kng.] Gold coin: and eighth yeara of the cycle each having IS such months. a combining power of its color; hence, money. [< F. ocrt, < L. ochra^ < — oc-tair'^y •nouik a. Same as ocTToriVNots.— oc"- of eight. See valence. [< iiT.okta(U-)s, < oA-W, eight.] (ir. lichrn. yellow ocher, < Ochrot^ P*^!*^-] o»'kert; ta>he'drite« n. Hjfineral. An adamantine, brown, tndl- — <»c-tad'lo, a. o'cker*; o'ker*. go-blue, or black titanium dloxlil iTK>oi that crvntjilllzt-n In oe'la-jfon, ©c'tu-pen, n. 1. deom. A figure, especially antlinoDT ocher, any of the three minerals cen-an- the tetragonal »)Dtem.eoTniiH>n)y In pyramidal fonn. Called a plane figure, with eiglit sides and eight angles. 2. also anataiie. — oc*tani'er-ouH, a. ilte, Htlblconlte, and voigeiite; iiM'd as pigments.— bl»- oc^ta-e'dritet. /'(//•/. A work with eight bastions. [< Gr. okfaffdnoe, Biol. Having the parts In eights, as a tlower with eight mem- nalh o., same as bismite.— radmiam f., the mineral eight-cornered, < okto, eight, qdma, comer.] — oc- greenorklte: used as s uigment.— e*. a clayey bers In each set of organs: frequently written 8-meroit». -f- rhrane tas:'o-iial, a. Having the form of an oct^igon, or its sec- (H-her colored green with rhromlum oxJd.— coDalt o.« m>-loni'er-oaHt.— oc-tau'der, h. A plant having lion an octagon; eight-sided.— the mint-nil erythrltt: used as a plKUient.— Dnlcb o.* flowers with eight stamens.— Oc-tanMrl-a. h. pt. The oc-la8:^o-iial-ly, adv. rhrome yellow and whiting.— Boldea o. I. A native elKhth class In the I.lnnean artlflclal oo'^ta-lae'dron, oc'ta-hi'dren, n. Oeoni. A solid of plants, embnictn*: ttiosehav- (jcher. 'i, A mixture of light-yellow oelHT, chrome yel- system iMJunded by eight plane faces. [< \At. octaedros, < Gr. inKp<*rfeet t1<>wen»wlth elKht Miamentt, » low and whltlnjf.— tfreen o.. a yellow ocher mixed with okta^drfm. < okfd. eight, -)- fiedra., seat, < hezomai, sit.] evenlnif-prhnrofe. potsMtlum fernM-yauld.— Indian o., a native Indian n>d. as tlie fuchsia and — regular octabedron. a stdid bounded by eight a. Hot. OforiH-r- i^ee KEo.— Iron o., the mineral hematite: used as a pis- — ec*ian'dii-an, equilateral triangles, the angles of which so meet as to talning to the class Octandrin; having mrnt.— molybdir o., same as molvboitr.— plumbic form six sumtnits or \ ertlces. •.. name a^ v i-pd red ffrniglnous native eight sumens. oc-lan^dri-ouHti o., a — oo^ta-Iie'dral, rt. 1. Having eight equal plane (jcher, kn<".^ - Imtutn red, Venetiiin rrd. Prn*' •c-lan'drouHt,— oc"iu-pb«M'ic, Fitted forrl^rht volres; roin- faces. 2. of. pertaining to, or made up of octahedrons; Han red, mt 1 Itoninn o., a native o<-herof a. Mw. IMWed In eight harrnonh- pJirtx— oc'- as, octahedral lK)rux. oe^io-o'drlo-alj. a deeporati^' . r Spanlfili n.. a varlt-ty of red nible Havingeight ocher.— taniullr o., ^ iiiitl\<- brown lanialuni oxld found la-pla. u. I. A written or oc-tani'o-fer.ectam'g-tfir. Pros. I. a. In Finland. — ir tin rlr o.. HHine asTBi.Li kitk.— luunatlc printed In eight lanKuatres, 2* Any measures or metrical feet. II. n. A verse of eight feet. ImmiIc - nam** as tinomtitk — "firii'- as tkaconitk. poIvKlot In eight languages eight, o.* uranir o.. [ < LL. octametntm, < Gr. oktametron, < okfd, + 'I. M-'M. KlKht- vanadic o., a native )t-II<.\* ,lil found near oe^la-pod'ic, metron, measure.] l-alo-<-ui>.r1..r - utirK. fitr>t«'(l.- «i'.inp'o-dy. '*. Pro". An vlirlol «.. ypl- oc'tan, ©c'tan, a. Recurring on the eighth day; having eli£hr-foni4-d verw or period. - oci'- low o.. wnie nj< 1,1 mom tk: t-a: // f/flloir. the AnKxanipleof intervalsof fever. [ l^.octo, eight.] nreh^y, /(. A jtovernnient by elRht a week;a8. anot^aw < «'cher-oui», O'kfr-us. rt. I. <;:, ,. .; ng to, (>r con- Octaiidrla;,„.,«,,,,-,«. Flower CTsons; also, a country und<*r eljtht ru- ':# oc-lan'der, oc-tan'drl-an, etc. See wrr-. taining iK'her: as, an orh^nnm day. 2. Having the "' ; nt»in.h.-Lvi.' nt.ordlvldedlntoelghtgovemnu'nu. " oo'taiK', ec'ten, ri. C/iet/i. An oily mobile inflammable color of ocher; lingeil with used es- light-yellow brown; commnind (('„II,^) of the paraffin series, found in petrole- The South'Saxnns were th»j laitt p«^ple of the octarchu who ern- pecially in zoology and iMjtany. t>y bra<^ Chriittianity. Linoaro Enfj. vol. i. r. | o'chre-oast; o'chronst. A poem or strophe containing eight lines. oc^taM'tl- sides and eight angles. [ < LL. octanffidus, < h. octo.

4iO = owt; •!!; Ifl = frad, }§ = fntwv; «sk; choreli; Alk = the\ so, sine, l^k; so; tliin; zh = azate; F. boA, dttne. <^from; ^^ obsolete ; X^ variant. .

Ootana lais oddly

eigbt, - + an^duti. comer.] oc-lan'sn-Iar, a.- oc- oc''to-|ten-a'rl-an, ec'to-jen-6'ri-an. I. Being talning to the eye and the prominence of the cheek; as, the tan'sn-Iar-nes8, n. eighty oculozygmnaUc furrow. or from eight_y to ninety years of age. , n, A Oc'tang, ec'tanz, n. Ailron. A southern constellation person of between eighty and ninety years. oc'u-Ius, ec'yu-los, n. [-li, -lai or -II, pl.^ [L.] 1 Called also Oi'Uins Hadleianu«. See coxstkllation, W. The octoaenarian Iovm to «^ad about people of '}}''? [< L. octanii, half-quadrant, < octo. eight.) ninety and over. I-EPIDOPTERA,^'i^^^:°i^^'«^S'^^,^^^and ^S" ^""^"l ."'•l'"'^' Holmes Ot-er jAe Teacups ch.^, p. 37. [H. H.& CO. '91.] peacock. 2. i;o<. A leaf.bud. 3. oc'taut, ec'umt. w. 1 . Au eighth part of a circle. 2. r , J . J .... 1.^ T ^ , Arch. A round window* an eve. Attron. The position in the heavens that is one-eighth "^ oc-tog'en. '^'"S'"''''' "'S'^y-J o't-y-dronic, o'si-drOm, n. \ New Zealand rail (genus of a circle distant frtint conjunction or quadrature; one i'^-vfTv^"""™' .'.,• ff^rfnwiws) having abortive wings and .,.K . . ... •. v; - / /i r,.. T, • , X ^ 6wift>runuing. of the four positions of the moon mulway between new oc-to'lc» ec-to'ie, a. Chem. Derived from octane. 0"cy-dro-mI'nie n'si-dro maPnl o;' ci-dro mi'ne re or full moon and quarters. o«-'tll(e:. in- a white crystalline compound 3. -Vau/. An -octolc acid, (CgHwOs) pi. Omith. A subfamily of AaaWa-, represented bv the strument similar to a sextant, but having an arc found variously, as In butter, coconut-oll, and Llmburger of on y ocvdromes « ft if i 1 cheese, also O-cvd'ro-muB \.;. Condi. A suborder or . T,, orderoforder of dibranchiate cephalopods with "'^^'P""?.'. O'si-pOd, «. A sand-crab or ocypodid. oc'tave. ec'tev ri [oc'twed- oc'ta'ving 1 1 8 suckersucker-bearing " Inin „ „.. .„..„.,i,_.. / »^.,... . ' ' — O'si-ped'i-dl . 0"cy-pod'l-da!,. -de, n. pi. Crust. musical instruments, to reenforcc an organ- or piino- trnecuttletlshes, [< Ur.o*M;xw<(o*M;»rf(.) eight,_ _ .or A J™/; family of grapsoidean crabs with a quadrangular tone by adding a pipe or string tuned an octave above, < "*(?; ^'f^t. + nous, foot.] Oc-to'pl-at; cara- i?"^' pace very wide in front acutely use octaves Oc''to-po'dI-at.— oc'to-pod, oc-top'o-dan, and angulated, and long ». To throughout the playing of a piece. eye-stalks; sand-crabs. O-fyp'o-da, n. (t. g.) [< oc'tave, o.dol'de-an, a. & n. da!t.— oc"to-pod'ld, !J.— o<-top'o-doId, .. TEBVAL ,a.&n.oa,a.a. & „„ OdcL Phil. Soc. oc-to'pus, ec-to'pus, C. W." Cec'to-pus, W'.i) (xiii1, —,,.'.,,..__ .. , , ,, .. ., & n. odi ou,nd o. ir.i The limits of the perception of sound-vibratioQ8 are very wide, ^ r -- ' --- -.: -., t ...__i y^__.'^._... '^ ..'\v fw , C Wr.' (6d, C.» S. W.^ HV.i) Ixiii), n. .1 . [-PI, -pal or -pi, pi.] An octopod cuttlefish, esi>ecially vii., more than eleven octaves. A hypothetical force supposed by Baron von Reichen- Joseph of Octopus or a related ge- Le Conte Sight pt. i, ch. 4, p, 62, [a. '81.] ,^ bach (1788-1869) to peri'ade all nature, and that could nus; a devil-fish; poulp. note at this interval only be recognized by its effects on (2) A above or below any other, con- The octopi mostly frequent certain sensitive sub- jects, who were sidered in relation to that other. (3) Two notes at this in- rocky coasts and prey on mol- said to be able to see flames and smell odors terval, sounded tdgether; also, the resulting consonance. lusks and crustaceans. Octo- issuing from magnets, and sometimes from crys- See INTEKVAL. (4) In oiian-building, a stop giving tones pus vulgaris, sometimes 9feet tals, and to experience sensations of heat or coldness an octave higher than those normally corresponding to long. Is eaten In Mediterranean when magnets or crystals were brought into frictional countries. O. punctatus.fouml the keys played. Called also pnnclpal, octave-flute slop, contact with the body; assumed to account for the al- on the Pacific coast of Norlli and octaiV'Stop. Compare stop. 2. The eighth day from leged phenomena of mesmerism or animal magnetism. America, Is sometimes 16 ferr Its various a feast-day, beginning the count with the feast-day as long. They are naturally timid manifestations were called elod, chymod, one: also, the lengthening of a festival so as to include and Inoffensive. The Edible Octopus ( Octo- crystalod, etc. CaMed also astrtU fluid. [< Gr. /lodos, the eighth day. 2. Figuratively, any organ- pus vulgaris). V24 road.] odic forcet; odyllc forcet. ^" short, he [Dr. Braid] could repeat DarinK the octave of the reopening festival a succession of eve- ized power regarded*as nYanyarmed and of far-reaching , all the phenomena adduced services ning have been held. capacity for harm. Conch.A genus typical '.".'!! ?* 3. [0-], of „^ii t'Rh™,i"lv!^.,';''?f;l?i." ?^' "L'.SH'I^? ''''.t' ^^ well without maernets as with them, provided only that the ' Church Times [London] Oct. 16, '91, p. 987, col. 4. Octopodidx. [a.] sub- jects believed that some operation was being performed, and were 3. Any interval similar to the musical octave; specific- oc"to-roon', ec'to-riln', n. A person having one-eighth led to expectcipect some result.result, W.w. B. Ca&tkhter{;arpkntkr MentalMtmtnl PhysiologyPhiijtinlnntt ally, the first eight lines in a sonnet, or a stanza of eight negro blood and seven-eighths white blood; the offspring '''' "• '='' 1*. P- 549. [a. '74.] lines. 4. [Gt. Brit.] A liquid measure of one-eighth of a of a white person and a quadroon. [< L. octo, eight.] OtVi, n. God: abbreviated to avoid open profanity: some- _: .,..••..„.=„_ __„.^ ____._. .. ' „ _ „ . ., ~ ' times an Interjection. pipe or butt of wine. SeeMEAsuBE. 5. Fencing. A low oc"to-8ep'aI-ouB, oc'to-style,-yle.etc., „«..etc. SeeSeeoCT-.OCT- Compare ods. Odd^Od'dt. O-dac'l-dae, o-das'i-dl thrust toward the opponent's right side, or its oc'to-yl, ec'lo-il, re. Cheni.•C. A hypothetical radical or o-dgc'i-de, n. pi. Ich. The guard, , " ., r r,^ - - Odacmie„„„™ as„„ a family.1.. [P., < L. ocfat-a, f. of octefiw, eigTitii, < octo, eight] (CgHisO) contained in octoicacie"acid and" its compounds, but [ < Odax 1 ,— o-dac'td, n.— J Phrases, etc. : — the octave beginning not known isolated. octoicoic Gr. hyB, material.] od'a-cold, a. & n. great octave, [< , + ^ , ^ „^„^ ., ... with C below the bass clef. See scale.— oc'tavescoup"-jip' - octroi', 6c"trwQ',W. (ec'trwS,^'.E. /.),n.I.), n. [r.] Od"a-crnje, ed-a-sai'nl"-sdi'nl or<» -cf'ng,-ci'ne, n. pi./rf. Jch. A sni)- , 1. Agovern- "J'^"*"-''*^' ^ ler, n. A contrivance attached to the keyboard of musical mental grant or privilege given to some company or person; family of labroid fishes with a long body, many dorsal Instruments so as to unite each note with its octave.— o.a especially, a trade monopoly thus conferred. 2. A tax spines, and sharp incisorial edge to the jaws, instead of flute, n. 1. The piccolo. "J, An organ»stop.— o.sstop, levied at the gates of a city, especially European In France, front teeth. O'dax, re. (t. e.) Gr n. See OCTAVE, [< odax bv bitin?o'^ng. 1(4).— short O.((?rfira7i-&«j7 -— . ...,-' ._,,-.., ._...,__ __..._. odd doors are on the north side of the street. 3. Left < OCT- "1- -YL.]— oc"tyl-ain'in, oc"tyl-aiii'ine, ,. [L., abl. of octavvs; see octave, k.] Ghent. A bitter colorless liquid compound (CsHigN) ob over after a number has been divided or distribute into oc-ta'vo, re. A book, pamphlet, or collection of paper talned variously, as by heating octyliodld with alcoholic am equal groups; as, ten contains three threes and an odd Id which the sheets are so folded as to make eight leaves. mtuiia. cap"ryl-ani'in}:,.--oc'tyl-ene, 'i. Cheni. An one. 4. Additional to any round number, or to any The sizes of octavo pages vary In different localities, but oily liquid hydrocarbon (CgHje) formed by heating octyllc specified or customary num'ber: thrown in or mentioneii the following are generally recognized in the United States: ^1^';^^^L^J,^?_^^1^!*'"**V?'l'?-'1'1.^A^???^^^^^ without exact enumeration: sometimes following a nu cap 8vq, 4>4 X 7 Inches; demy 8vo, 5^ x 8 Inches; im- eneji oc^tenet* It has several metameric modifications meral with adverbial force, meaning more; as, two hun- perinl 8vo, iH X 11)^ Inches; medium 8vo, 6X9)^ with similar properties.— oc-tyl'ic, a. Ctwm. Relating dred and odd miles; fifty inches, the size usually assumed when 8m Is written with- to or derived from octyl. odd head of cattle. 5. Not included with out a limiting adjective; royal 8vo, 6Vi X 10 Inches. o'cub, O'cub, n. [Prov.) The cockchafer, oak'swebt". others; occasional; casual; as, he did some — oc-ia'vo^post", re. Note-paper of octavo size. Cora- oc'u-lar, ec'yu-lar, a. 1. Of or pertaining to the eye; odd jobs for me. 6. Differing in appearance or in char- pare OCTAVO, n. acter from the usual; pecuhar; singular; as, an odd . . ophthalmic; as, the OOTtor lenses. 2. Derived from or oc-leii'nl-al,ec-ten'i-al,a., 1. Kecumng at intervals connected with the eye; visual; as, ocular proof. character; an odd experience. 7. Being of a pair or of eight [< years. 2 Occupying periods of eight years. LL. ocularis, < L. oculus, eye.] series the rest of which is wanting; single; sole; only; octen«ts,< KLL. L. octo, eight, -f anret/s, year.] — oc'u-lar-ly, adv. With the eye; by means of as, an odd slipper; an odd number of a magazine. 8. — oc-ten'nl-al-Iy, arf». sight— oc'u-la-ryt, a. Pertaining to the eye. [Archaic] Being somewhat apart; secluded; remote- ae, , , oc-tet', ec;tet', re. Mus. piece hidden in an orfa corner. 1. A of music com- oc'u-lar, re. The combination of lenses of a telescope, 9t, Disagreeing with; atodds; posed for eight parts or adapted to eight performers. 2. microscope, or other optical instrument, with which the also, unique; peerless. [< Ice. oddi, triangle, < oddr, A choir of eight voices, or an orchestra of eight perform- focal imafe is viewed point of a weapon.] ere: generally implying anomalous, eight different parts, but some- Oc"u-la'ta, eCyu-le'ta or -n-lg'ta, n.pl. Arach. A Synonyms: bizarre, comical, droll, eccen- times applied tric, extraordinary, fantastic, fantastical, grotesque, pecul- to a double quartet. [< L. octo, eight.] division of spiders with eyes of very different sizes, as oc-\ette'X; oc''tl-plio'ni-umt; oc'tu-ori; ot- iar, quaint, queer, singular, strange, uncommon, unique, Lycosidse, Attidas, etc. _[< L. oculatus; see oculate.] unmatched, unusual, whimsical. See anomalous; qiteer; oc'u-late, ec'yu-let or -Igt. a. Uaving eyes or spots re- RARE.— „J.Sii_"'"/.- . ^r /I. ^» .u •!,»,,, .1 Antonyms: common, conventional, customary, oc'tlc, oc'tic. I a. Math. Of the eighth order or degree, sembling eyes: ocellate. [ < L. oculatus, < oculm, eye.] normal, ordinary, usual. II. re. Ala. A quantic of the eighth degree. [< L. oc'u-la"tedl: > j j — odd'scoinesHliort", n. 1, Same as odd'Comt'Short- «"1"»''"" (ilath.y an eqiiation of ly. *i. Any odd bit of clothing.— oddicome^sbortly* ?£?'i*'#,k']~""" oc"u-lau'di-to-ry, oc-yu-lS'di-to-ri, a. Combining n. [Slang. 1 Some day or other "" *""''^»'=''' " ™'^'^<' °' """ •='«•"•> visual and auditory functions, as marginal to come soon; some time sense-organs ^" ' " delref or ofdlr soon.— oddsends, n. pi.. [Rare.] Fragments, remnants, [< I- '«"'«*' ^y«' LL-««''«<«w«,- or scraps; onus ana ends.— n. Having oc.tIl'llon,ec-til'ytTn,a. Numbering an octillion: orig- i"r"?,!'/„'l!'°Tr- + oddslookiUK,ookiug a strange or odd appearance.— odd man, in England,__ „ .aserv-a """"'' ""** "'""' P"''*'"'"^ '"' "" ""'- S'^?nZ,er'al"'' oc-u-IireToui, eCyn-lifgr-ns, a. Eye-bearing. ant employed occasionally or retained for odd jobs.— odds mark, II. [Prov. Eng.] That Held or part of a farm which is regularly devoted to a particular crop. H. Diet.— odd ; form of or even, a game that consists In guessing whether a num- ber of concealed objects or a concealed number is odd or ^ST^f^^SXlnSlJ^^tZ^^SSSi^-S^ even.— oddspinnnte, «. Bot. Pinnate with a single leaf " "*'. 9^ ""1^ "?'," ^oojm, 1. A at the end, as In the locust; Impariplnnate.— oddsside, n. eystein, the eighth mwer of a million, represented V a - " .y"..'*^'.P*^ . genus typical of Ocidinidse. 2. [o-l A coral of this A permanent linpresslou or mold of part of a pattern, used figure 1 with 48 cipliers. 2. The symbols representing genus. L. oculus, eye.] by molders In like manner to a false part. See false part, either [< — Oc"u-Il-iia'ce-a, n. pi. of these numbers. SeeNOTATioN. [< L. octo, eight, under part.- tlie in whist, the trick p of corals. — oc"u-Ii-na'ce-aii, a. odd trick, seventh -I- mi.i,ioN.] taken by one side when the other side takes six, there being lii'l-dae, n. pi. Zooph. A family of oc-tiriloiitli, ec-til'yunth, a. 1. Last in a series of thirteen tricks In all. aporose madreporanan corals, especially those having an octillion: an ordinal numeral. 2. Iteing one of an odd'=Fel"low, ed'.fe|-0, n. A member of the Inde- corallites in cofonies increasing by gemmation, w'hich is octillion equal parts; as, an oclillionth part. pendent Order of Odd-Feilows, a secret society for the ""^^ "''*" OTnm«trical, and walls of coral- oc-tll'lionth, n. Oneof an octillion equal parts ,?, ^„tual aid and benefit of the members. fotindf>d in the of any- lites«r'« often"i*!™increasing m thickness by exogenous growth, thing; the quotient of a unit divided by an octillion. igth century, and having hxiges in the United States, "'*'• Great Britain, and on the continent of Europe. oc'ti-renie, oc'to-ba«8. etc. See oct-. „;7.? ''i'. niV i^' '?-~"C'?;"SO™ versedt, or skilled,;, A m octo-. See oct-. °fr™,;M,^Vi?L*I' 'rhn"- ^^'^r „dd,,.ty ed'i-ti, «.. [-ties,;;/.] 1. The quality of be- trcatmg diseases of the eye [< L. ocidus, eye.] Oc-to'ber, ec-«5'bsr, n. 1. The tenth month of the i„g odd or peculiar; erratic difference from what is nor- oculo-" Derived froni Latin ocjrfMS the eye: a combi- nial or common; singularity. year, during which the sun enters the sign Scorpio. It 2. An odd or peculiar pertaining, to, • ," characteristic; an eccentricity: as, his oddities arVharm- was the eiglith month of the Roman year. See calen- ?hl!?l'?;^;,7,hfl';: ?;;h''!'i!!.*y.' h"' °m An odd orVciliar person or thing. dar. 2. [Kare.] Ale or cider, as being made in October. fSgi ^-'Z-u-fo^mo'tor I a cinTlnp7r™SfSe"d '««^-. 3- K'?!''"!] wl^lTnio™m".n'"7™ceVeTa8Ahe odd'ly, ek% adv. In an odtfn.anner; singly; uneven- Sir, if I wiu worthv to advise you, I would have a bottle of ffood bcS"

ly odd number (Math.), an odd Dumber that is the prod- od'myl, ed'mil, n. Chem. A volatile limpid oil with a ted to LamelliroHtreit, with tooth-Uke serrations of alveolar two odd numbers, as 21. uct o1 fetid odor, obtained when fats or oils containing oleic Jaw-margfns.— o''dou-top-te-rvg'id, ".— o"don- odd'nieiil. ed'mtiit, n. That which Is only an irregular top-ter'y-goid, a.— acid an- distillett with sulfur. [< Gr. odrnl^ smell (.< 0"uou-top'te-ryx, n. Omilh. anil incidental and not an efiaentla) part of i^ome courtie Agcnus typiciilof 0(/oHro/>fcr//(/i(/tf'. '2, or ozo. smtll). + hyU^ material.] 1. [o-J A bird of sv^tein; that which Lb regarded aa occasional, ca^^ual, or this genus.asO./oJiV/jDiciwfroni the London Clay. —O -don "- o^do-sraph. O'do-graf, n. A hand-odometer for record- siiiwrlluous: something left over: generally in the plural. to-rhyn'chi, n. pi. Qrnith. The lAnnelliroHtres. — o- ing the rapidiU', length, and number of strides of one don^'to-rhyn'chous, «.— odd'neMK, ed'nes. n. The character of IJeing odd; un- 0"don-tor'ni-theB, C. walking. [< Gr. hodos. way, -graph.] ((l-don'''tor-ni'theH, W.),n. pi. Ornith. Anextinctsec- evenness; peculiarity; singiiilariiy. -f o-doni^e-ter, o-dem'e-ter, n. An implement for meas- tlun of lilrds including all those having teeth. See fllus. under odz, n. jtl, and sometimes ging. 1. Diflference. as odds, uring distance traveled. Spe- Hesperorxis.— o-don"tor-nitli'ic, '^/.— o-don"to- in favor one person or thing as contrasted with an- iitniete'iiia, >i. substance of ciflcally: (1) An appliance A for cleaning the teeth; a den- other: advantage or exceee arising from distribution or attachable to the wheel of tifrice.— o-don'^'to-Hte-re'siH, «. Pathol. Loss of the comparison; aa, the odda are in my favor. a vehicle for recording the teeth.— o-dou'^to-stoiii'n-toua, ft. Having tooth«llke jaws, as an insect; mandlbulate. o^'don-to^'to-niousi. And how can man die better Than facing fearfal oddst number of revolutions made, from which the distance trav- — o-don"to-ther"a-pi'n, w. J/ed. Hvglcnic treat- Haca(JLay Horatiua st. 27. raentandcare of the teeth; ersed may be computed. (2) dental therapeutics.— O-don"- pt. 3. Betting. The chance* of success conceded to one A wheel, with a recording in- to-tor'niie, «. Ornitft. An e.vtlnct subclass or order contestant over another or others; hence, an allowance strument attached, propelled of birds with teeth In special sockets, as the Cretaceous Ichtliijornithidw. by way of handicap: as, the oddx on him were 2 to 1; by hand, as for surveyon*' CMon-tor'nifet.—o-don''to-tor'- Miic, a.— o-don''to-trip'His, n. Ptithol. what«///* will you give? 3t. Quarrel; dispute; debate. measurements. The wearing away of the teeth by abrasion, o-don'^to-tfaryp'sist.— — at oddH, at variance; in disagreement; as, the pastor [ < Gr. hodos., way, + met- o-don'try-py, n. Dental Surg. The operatfou of per- and his coiiKreiraiiun are still (tt o«W/(.— heavy o* (J5M- ron, measure.] An Odometer Attached to forating a tooth to draw off pus from an Inner abscess. Uuf/). Kfeat udds.— loDff o** a grt^t deal; a», ne was by — o'^do-met'riC'al, a. a Wagon-wheel. O'don'to-graph, o-den'lo-graf, long ottd* the heavier man.— o. and endu, fragmeDta; n. 1. A templet for Relating to or performed by The lever sbown in- icraps: mlacellaneous articles. below the marking outlines in gear-teeth', as in drafting. 2. A an odometer. strument operates an interior ed'l-ded'f, n. [Prov. Eng.] river-snaU. o-doiuV- I)asteboard protractor on which are printed rules and od'dy*dod'*dy. A wheel havioi; 99 divisions, and Od, 1. The form of lyric poetry anciently in- troust [Rare].—o-dom'- tables for correctly laying out gear-teeth. ode, n. the^^ indicator_^^^^ retristers_^ „^.„ ,„„ion the [ < odonto- + tende

'. oluliona of tUe wheel. The d is- grnph'ic-al-ly, t-". -c), the music for an ode. See lyric. €>-do'na, "doii'told, n. An o-- den's Otle: Keata's (Xff toaKlgntlngaJe; Lowelrs Commem- oration Od*. dal lobe prolonged, and the teeth nall'sluiped: sand-sbarks. The b^art in Elf>^«« forms the discoame. O^don-taift'pia. n.

!•; ' ,.,.. ,.«y. from which It differs by the Nroad attachment of the pin- <>»» ^. " [Scot.] A grandchild. oyJi oyet lit C.« E. 1. W."*), nules. In which the nerves paK>* inort- directly and nearly " An oe, or urandchild, of Liickie Jaup was hired to assist in the To_ . Imbue, charge, or parallel fron] the base.— O^'don-top-f e-ryg'l-diF, ». increased drudt^ery of the family. atT' ;,.; ... ;..;. . fPrnith, ... .^]. pi. AnEoceni Scott finrueon's Doughter ch. 1, p. 28. |l. B. A co. '63.] an out; fAe; go, i^k; 3 •!!; IQ ^ feud, |9 = future; c = k; cbarcb; dh = bIhb, vo; tbin; «h = a^ure; F. boA, dttne. <,/n>m; i, obsolete; U vetriarU. — ! '

1330 oir

«e, oe, t or oi. A digraph (in un-Augliclzed Latin pro- — ee-noin'e-ier, n. A hydrometer used to Indicate the Shall we denv that Star may sintr with Star chant sublime, Bunciation a diphtbong) representing (U the Latin diph- alcoholic strength of wines by dett^rmlnlng their sptsclrtc In unheard of mortal ears t Charles Mackay Music the Spheres st. gravity.— n. [ Hare. 1 One who Is too fond of 8. thong oe or the Greek diphthong oi, i\» in oesophagus, (je-nopli'i-llHt, of wine; a wlm'-b!bl)er.— u,'"uo-phIyK'i-a, n. Pfilhol. 3. Directed toward or exerted upon, indicating direction oeso^Offus (Gr. oisophagos): often written simply (in drunkenness; drunken apoplexy.— Intoxication; (E"no- of causal agency or action: corresponding to tlie preferably > a;- e, classic- completely Anglicized wonls as in esoph- Ihe'ra, «. Hot. A large genus of extratroplcal Ameri- al genitive objective: sometimes a redundant agu9; (2) the Teutonic umlauled or m'uditied o (oe or ^>, can herbs of the evening-primrose family (Onagracese), use after vernal nouns; as, "The Hanging o/'the Crane'"; the «8 in Qottfu, (iiUhe; (3) [tv] the French «, as in ceil- characterized bv alternate leaves and axillary, solitary, yel- mas- sacre the innocents; the telling ItuU. The ligature (J (le'koldt; ol'koldt. to get the best of a bargain ; the brig had the wind of us. g-cel'o-ji, > let (sec esophagus): combining oe-col'o-sy, n. Jiiol. The science of the re- oeHopliagi*, forms. No answer did he deieo, till I had stormed: lations of organisms to one another or to the surround- oetnopliago-. j a*-8oph"a-gal'sl-a, w. Pat/ioJ. Pain in ' Answerest me nought, who have the power of thee ( ing outer world; the correlations of organisms inhabit- the esophagus.- cB"»!(oph-ag'e-aI, er back; thickknees or stone- [< CESTRUS.] devoted to that whicn is habitual or customary; exhibit- — oes'trl-aii, opH'trtd, a. «.— oes'trolcl, a. plovers. See illus. under thickknee. working conception. CHcket. the side of the field (EuicMEML's.l — ce"dtc-ne'niin(e, a. A. H. Clouou Bothie of Tober'na'Vuolich pt. iii, 1. 11. 4. On on the left of the

bowler: ojjposed to (?/? . ont four attribute, or circumstance: commonly with a verb; as, nold principle contained in the OCiianthe Jbttalona, used points. [< ov, prep.\ his breath smelled wine; his talk smacked the : medicinally as an emetic— oe-nan'thol, n. Chem. A of of sta- Compounds, etc. —off and on. 1. Now and then; clear, colorless, aromatic oily compound ((;7Hi40), obtained ble; your views savor o/" fanaticism. occaalonalh'; as. be came to see nie off and on for a month. variously, as by distilling castor-oil. Called also cenan- Speech is of Time, Silence is of Eternity. tJ. Naut. Tacking alternately, as toward and away from the tftf/lic aUlehyde and heptoU: aldeh}/de.— te-nnn'thy It n. Carlyle Sartor Resartus bk. iii, ch. 3, p. 172. [H.] shore.- off'sbenr, rt. Brickmakiug. To carry (bricks) Chem. SameasHEPTVL.— ce-nan'thyl-ate. w. Chem. A from the inolding«table and denoslt on the drying-floor.— (6) As a characteristic feature or function; as, a man of salt of cenanthytic acid.— ce"- oll'^bearer, «.— oflicapt, ri. To remove the cap as In might; tidings o/'wpe; nerves iron. (7) As properly uan-thyl'ic, a. Chem. Same qf salutation.- off'cut", n. Print. 1 , A surplus margin cut as HEPTOIC— ce"nan-thyl'i- belonging or pertaining to; as, the majesty qf the law; from paper. li. A part of a printed sheet cut off for sepa- dene, n. Chem. Same as uep- the skin of the fox; the height qf the mountain. (8) In rate folding; as, the offcni of a l^'page form. Compare in- TiNE.— ce-nan'thyUouHt, a. the relation of ownership or possession; as, tlie room qf SKT.—offsnow, ». Jwdraul. Achannelby which watermay Cfunn. Same as ocnasthic or flow away.— oil: An allowance fonnerly the duchess; a man of means. (9) As being composed reckoning* « HEPTOIC. made to British army officers of a certain rank from the of or containing; as. a ship iron; a cliapleto/" flowers; (E-nin'iren inarlH. 0«ol, qf money anpronrialed for army clothing. Imp. lUrt.— off* a pitcher milk. As being taken, selected, or 8ul> lilrhly fossfUfenms Upper Mio- of (10) sidef adv. At or on the wrong sltie. Specifically: (1) In cene (»"ds of Switzerland. tracted from (a source of something greater or more hockey, between the ball and the goal of the opposing side —

ofa, firm, gak; at, fftre, ^cord; ^l^mfint, $r = ovct-, eight, % = usage; tin, machine, % = r«new; obey, no; net, n$r, at^m; full, rfile; but, bum; oisle; t , ;

oir 1221 ofneiali§in

to (line (gT (or q/Tq^) bread and cheese. 4. .VaM^ Oppo- an undertaking. 3. [Archaic] To make an oflEering, as hi8 kind offices were most helpful. [F.» < L. qfficium^ eite and to seawam of» not far away; as, the ship'tiip lay of prayer < or thanks; engage in worship. 4t. To strike optif, work, -\-facio, do.] just o/f the hfadland, a blow. 5+. To show or pay respect. [< AS. Qfrian,< Synonyms: see com.missiox. — I'roHi oil', off from; off; aa, take the kettle/roniO^T the L. offew. < Ob, toward, -hfero, bear.] Componnds.etc.: — liiitleOffice (/?. C. CA.),anofflce 0re.~ oli'eulor. 1 . I'nsatlsfactorj' in color, as a pem. »i. Synonyms: see allege; bid. of lessons and hymns in honor of the Virgin Mary.— [SlaoK-j Bad or Indecent by implication; of doubtful vir- of- — ol'ler-a-bl(e, a. That maybe offered.— of'fer- fieesbear"er, /(. One entrusted witli office, or the per- tue; as. the story Is ojTto/o'-.— oil', or ofl'oue*s bneie or fonnauee of a speeifled er,;,. One who otfers, tenders, or presents, in any sense. official duty.— o.:buok, «. 1. A ehamp.,. _l.^la"K-J.-- ,,-j _1.*. putV...V,.of .,....,..<«,.one's head; ..».j.crazy, 'i...„.»-Mis- public record pertaining to a government office, i, A taken.- oa*oii«*» feed L:>li*ngJ, Indisposed to eat; without off^r, n. 1, The act of offering; a proffer, tender, or book of worship or service.— o.sbuildinK, )(. building appetite. proposal, as to do or give, submitted A for consideration; designed for offices.- o. copy (Lute), a properly authen- oflr. Sf, interj. Begone! away! as, of with you! as, my offer was made in pity. 2. The voluntary act of ticated and certilled transcript of a record; eertlded copy — offal, ef'al. a. Refuse or wa*te; as, offal corn. tendering or proposing to pay acertain sum, as for some- o. \ouni\{Luw), the verdict of a Jury in an inquest of office of offal, ;/. 1- Th*>»e parts of a butchered animal that are thing desireo, or to accomplish a specified undertaking a fact tiiat entitles the government to the possession of property. rejected as worthless or unlit for food. for a certain sum; also, the See incjukst.— o.=liold€-r, ». One who holds sum so offered; as, the con- a tractor's government office or clerkship; in general, any official — A Devon yield» a larger proportion of meat . . at the best joiou Offer for the new building was accepted ; the first o. hours, those hours in which business tlian an;r other beart. and perbaps there is none Tielding a uoaher for is transacted In Qfftr the house was $5,000. offices.— o.-hiiiiler or proportion of offal to the carcara. E. A. MerRITT in Houm Ex. o.sseeker, ». lU. S.] Onewlio The o^er is regarded1 as. continuing: tintii seeks to ohtjiin a Doc. «-'*«. ConsHlar Rep, vol. xxix. p. 581. [oov. PTO.orr. "86.] ^ the acceptance,^ , if.. the government office or employment. acceptance is at made once. Parsons' Conti-octs' voI.T.'p" 480^ ofti-eer,"M-oer, Of'i-gfir^ef'i-sgr, ». \. t. 1. 2. In general, that which falls off, as fragments or leav To command as an officer. 3. An attempt or Tile axil and 5Ist ings, regarded as of trifling value; rubbish or refuse of endeavor lo do something; pretense regiments, altliougli on tlie imperial roeter, liad or ehow. been raised in America, and were officered by colonists. any kind. 3. I» the fisheries: (I) Inferior fish: oppa«ed KlNOSroBD Canada vol. iv. bl. lii, ch. 4, p. 72. [B. « ,1. '90.1 to prune, yi) [Local, V. 8.) The small fish that are ta- Thep«..|n,briBgv.r,«r.ight.ndn«rro.,I»«Ien>Myoirer. „ to get in— bat all in vain. 'i. TO appouit oihcers for or over; as, the brig ken in a seine with the large ones and thrown away as was offl- BuKTis iPorto, Gnwe Afcoundma p. 36. [B. o. 4 CO. 74.] «)¥(/ the government. WOrlhI**S. [< OFF FALL', by Ht. i. To be of assistance. + «.] 4. proposal of marriage. ol'fl-cer, STnonyms: see dhegs. A n. 1. One elected or appointed to office, as in Slie rejected .evermi company, a society, or o ffraul '', ftf 'c^st*, n. Anything thrown away or rejected. "tTerii. till the wrinkles of age Iiad over- * an ecclesiastical body, or filling taken her. OOUWMITH 'orks. oH'ciiiiie"* ef cum', «. [Scot.] An excuse or pretext. Letter on Old Maidaand Bache- some other semi-pnbiic position, as by appointment. tftm [W. W. 8.1 of-fence', (tf-fenee^leiis, etc. Same as offense, etc. Five things are requisite to a good officer: abilitv, clean hands, 5t. Offering. dispatch, patience, and of-frnd'. gf-fend', r. I. t. 1, To give displeasure or impartiality. PKN.V H'orka, Fruits of Soli- Synonyms : see pboposal. tude in vol. v, pt. i, maxim 3W), 153. offen^' to: vex: annoy; disturb; " p. [PH. 1782.] as, I wae offended by nf*fl~S ;,n f>ff*>r«i x>. a 2. ilil. & Xai(U. One appointed to a certain rank and authority, wiiether by commission, warrant, or otherwise, l">',^'<' States affair^. - . . They would forgive you tuoner if you accused ti^m of army cniniulsHioned ofllcers make an /.'f '"'"«'"} every crime in toe De<«loKiie. offering of their lives. 2. That which is of- "o"! '"I and the civil branch, and arc respectively called o^cer.1 the line CHBumax Kin> Qiianaii of Honor bk. i, cfa. 3. p. U. (a. TS.] fered or given. Especially (Ecd.): (1) A contribution of and ojlcrriorthe Muff. The former branch comprises major-generals, 2. [.Archaic] To tnoKreu or violate, as a law: sin or donation in aid of r^lar church work, or for some brigadier.generais, colo- nels, lieutcnatu-coloncls. majors, captains, first lieuten- against: as, to cfitrut God. 3. [-\rchaic.) To cause to special purpose; as, missionary i^eriiigg. (2) Some- ants, and second lieutenants; the latter, officers of the engi- sin or stumble; as, to thing offered in worship, or by » ay of offend one of (iod'g children. 4+. expiation or con- neer, ordnance, medical, pay, coiiinil.ssary, quartermaster's, To attack: assail; also, to injure; harm. ciliation; a sacrifice. adjutanl.general's, and Itispector.gcnerars corps. The ancient Gener- 11. i. 1. T^t break or transgress laws or commands; Jewish offerings were either hloodv. as of al olUcers Include major-generals and brigadier-gener- animals sacrlSced, commit an offense orcrime; or bloodless, as of vegetables. Tliiv em- als, tlie grades of ueiiertll and UeiUeimiil-uenrral, like the sin: often with Oj/oiiu^ %, braced Uie barnt oflerlns, sinionerhiK. trespassi corresponding grades of mlnilriil and rin^admirul in the To displt^at**- or give offense; as, have I ever offended olTerinir, peaceiolrerlnv, and nipaiioliierhig. navy, having lieen abolished. The personal staff of a gen- Oriifiaaiity, fran the neoMcity of iu nator«. offend* at iu fint (8) Anaican C%. Customary ;jersonal tithes paid to the enil officer Includes his clilpf of staff and aides-de-camp, afpaaraac*. FBOtn>a TAomoj Cartute vol. ii. ch. 7, p. 130. [s. *K.] vicar of a parish, either at particular seasons or on sjicci- ^ouIColnlniMsionpd oOieerN, appointed byregimental ( < OF. tffendre, < L. affendo. < ob, before, fendo, ciimiiiniKlcrs, Include all below lieutenant, + fied occasions. [ < AS. o/Truny, < (ffrian ; see orrER, t.] second such as strike.] — of'fer-infftatone^ h- A stone on which 8«'rgeant-niajors,r-rriid'a'ntt. cap- the collection of alms in the Anglican and some otiier tains, conininndcrs, lieutenant-coinnianders, lieutenants, — or-rend'luic, n. Offense; lieutenants transftrenion.— of- church services. In the Lutheran Church it includes (junior grade), and ensigns; and (21 of the staff, comprising rrnd'reui, n. [Kare.] A female offender. also the general prayer Immediately following. In medical, pay, and engineer officers, naval con- (3) structore and assistant naval «r-fen«i«', tf-fens', n. 1. The act of offending; any th« early Christian church, a linen or silken cloth constructors, professors of or mathematics, and chaplains. , tnnagremion of law, divine or human; any sin, wrong, •carf used in various ceremonies connected Naval cndets, fornierly with the ad- styled niiil'liiiimeii, now iiKlrl-niiiMiiiniieii. Iliough not or fault. 2. Law. An act punisliahle by public prosecu- ministration of the encharist. 2. The act of offering, or commissioned enjoy |iri\ llcgc and consldcratiou as officers tion; a crime; misdemeanor; aj«, a felonious qffenae: a the thine offered; speclncally, the collection taken dur- in all navies. Warrant nlUeera, liolding warrants from minor offenne, 3. That which injures or the the President, wouods ing religions services. [ < LL. iffferlorium, place for of- rank Ix'low naval cadets; they are of tlie line feelings or cau9<-s displeasure, affront, or anger; as, no ferings, igunnere and boatswains) and of the staff < L. qffero; see orrER, f. 1 icarpenters and sailmakersi. offinu was int>'iidi-Ti of offentt. 6. [Archaic.] cause of sin or as, an igfhand speech or A sermon. 2. Unceremonious; cludes his chief of staff, flag-lli'utcnant, secretary (a lieu- iig. See Matt, xvili, 7. (OF., < L. offenta, < ^f- unconventional; Informal; as, aa offhand way or manner. tenant), and aides. In the Hritisli navy ranks are the same, ,.:lu: secorpEND.] except: (1) file grade or-renre';. An off'kand, maUer-Ktf.facl. shainhiinff method of speech would of commodore does not exist; (2) the tliree highest Synonyms: aifront, anger, crime, delinquency, displeas. Sfl«m to be tiie fashion in the British House of Commons. grades (In ascending series) are i(ce-ajiK - Anion^.'^TSr'J^on'JS;see. sjmonjrins ?!i?for way or manner: lieulewinl to rtitfcd states lienleniint (junior Antonyms, „i(hoHt grade). The •jpositions: aiioifenieu^oltui good morals; preparation; unceremoniously; m. to quote a same grades of civil (staff) officers exist, as well as warrant ijiii-at iin n poem (iffhand; she dismissed him offhand. 2. With- omeera and p<-tly officers. In the Hrltlsli anny the liighest Pitrasea: — diTlaible oflcnise il^te), a complex or out other suppttri than the hand, arm, and shoultler; as, grades, corresponding to the three highest In the navy, arc " ~"" (ill : .en.llled Criminal act tlial may tie trealiti as Involvingolvlng to shoot qffhand. ofT'hanind^edt [Colioq.]; off»- ascending series) lieuleniiiit-nenrrdl, general, and held- -*') ' or more coordinate mamhiil. The ri'st are In llie or unequal offenses,— mlllll««ry hand'ed-Iyt [Colioq.]. as t'nlfcd States arinv, arid the »., an ofTi'nite falling wltlilu the Jurisdiction of a courtn mar. staff corps e.vlsf much In the same lines, though not propor- or'Acet, rl. 1_ .- To put InIh office.ofllc *Z. To perform or effect tul. to give o., t4i give ground for displeasure. tionati'ly so numerous. See iilus. under — to as an ofllclal act or by reason of official position. seroeant and lake n., i'< r»-cl angr>' oraffn»nu-d. snofLilEK-STltAP. oVtitK, of'is, n. 1 . A particular duty, charge, or trust. Derivatives: ol'-fen«ie'rul,o. [Rare.] Cans- iiiu' oif.-ii^- or displeasure: wrong. of-renoeTal}. ^^r^^o5?n?;^t,rs;f^^tSi^LS ^^^^^^^^^^^'^^^^^=^ ol-feiine'leMM, a. Not giving offense; harmless. functiong; a*», a court (y?lfrtfr.* a custom-houBe o^(:^r. 4. authority; a post or poeitioti hrld by aii oRlciul or func- of-fenre'leisB;.— or-frnoe'leBa-lv, of-fence'- A member of the constabulary or police force. 5. In tionary; specjflcally, a povition of tnint or authority un- lesM-ly, ailr. or-ren'stl-blei, a. Giving offense.— corporate bodies, one who holds a specittud position, as der a government; as, the qfflce of aSecretary of State. of-ren'Mlon^, /*. .Assault of.fen'alouilt, secretary or treasurer, in distinction from ordinary em- w«t« tiy of-rrn'Mlv. -I)-, -nesKi. 'offiTislve. etc. Phil. Soc. Ther not v>en made rtfk office: but errst men. on ployees. 6. In certain honorary orders, one grade above whom the count rr for iuown urneftt had conferred o^r^. Web- of-fen'alve. «f fen'siv, n. I, Serving, adapted, or iu- the lowest. [< F. officier, < LL. officiaHus, < L. of- >TUl Workm,AdamBan4Jrffertion'iavo\.'i,p.\i\. [L. B. *CO. '&(t.J tenderivate post or enr»mnnifnt.—o. of Ihe deck (JVrt7f«.), the 2. Catisini; ilisgiist or unpleasant aensatlons; disagree- officer capacities, constitating e8tabli8l)ee or public trust; as, o^Wa/ duties. Derived of-fen'iilvp, I). .Vggreesive methods, operations, or at- _ done by a particular thing, or 2. from the that is llttec/. 1 . The charge, office, It.. tion, whose head(|narters are in an office; as. the offce or , . , n"t.-w>rthj llint. whiUt many vtnims migllt be o^ervd jurisdiction of an official. 2. The official heattquarters telcgrajihefl to as a biirrit..»tT,riii|f. tlw- .iri-.tT-ring might never colwiBt of more has me return. 8. Erd. ^\) LUurg. A of au ecclesiastical or other deliberative or governing animal. thAD 'm.'. A. < Avk ^rrijitund Dortrlne qf Sa^rrijtee hk. prescribed religions or devotional service, particularly 1. pt. il. rli. Sn. t 1, p. ;t. AT. . 77.] that for Uie canonical hours, or the service it^lf as, the ; or-fi^ial-lfiin, e?-tislV(?l*izm, n. 1 . Official st^ite, con 'i . To kwp fin sale or divine o^'if; the conmmnion make a specialty of; aa, we

He used, ' a, '>! /, to give roe etplanstiosa (2> Canon Law. A benefice w ithout jurisdiction. (3) 2. Rigid adherence to official forms or details; red- Ml j'-'iiAycfa. I. p. 8. {H. H. * CO. 74.1 The introit. of-n^cl-umt. 9. A proffered action of tapism; hence, unintelligent or obstructive performance 2. To make an essay or attempt : with al; as, to qfer at any kind, especially a service: usually In the plural; as. of duties; mere perfunctoriness.

Oils out; •!!; lA = f^ud. r= future; c = k; cbarch; = Me; go, sins, i^k; so; tbin; azure; |Q dh xh = P. boA, dttne,

Oil otUcially 1332 or monster that o'Ere, O'ger, n. Folk-lore. A demon was supposed to devour human beings; hence, a human being likened to such a monster. [F;, < Sp. ogw, < L. Or««i, abode of the dead.] ... — o'Kre-lBh, a. Like, characteristic of, or bentting an ogre — o'Kre-lBin, n. The character, habits, or con- duct of ogres.— o-gril'lon, n. A young or small ogre. o'areBs', O'gres, n. A female ogre. L. <«)W«m; «-e office, n. Her. A roundle sable. See lllus. under aous- "ortll.it?. l< CL. offMariu^. < original Btocli; issue. o'sretut" n I. <. ever remote from the gun-bullet.] t!. -i'TKo; -a-tino.] 1. DLB. < OF. Oi/OMW, of-«'c-l-ate. ef-flsh'i-Ct, of the I prayers. with men is geneially aequired, sn offspring o-jij'i-QU, a. Of or pertaining to the myth- i'o conductor assist m; as, to <#cia<« Sentiment O-sys'l-aii, [Archaic.l not, a» wllh the other «ex, of tlie >no>ji- primeval; as, the emit. inlelleetiml qoality, iral Mtic king Ogyges; prehistoric; at. To give forth; Bl'LWER-LYTTON Ernest Maltravers bk. i, ch. 5, p. 48. LI', "-i Ogyges.] the business of an office or public Wnwoian deluge. [< L. Ogyget. < Gr. Oj^ysre*, II i To transact descent. of generation. 3t. Production; ej-i-jai'i-d! or Ogi-gi'i-de, n. pi. Crunt. officer or leader. [ < LL. (#«<->'y-"-l'l-die, trait;" act as an fprinijan, spring.] those having o/»««m-«.-eorricE,«.J-oi-ii-.-i-i.nH-ol-ll'ol-a tor,«.i«r,«. [< AS. ofipiing. < 0J\ from, + Ordovician family of trilobites, especially tHao.. < UL oJKctiim: see orricE An smooth eves, facial sutures terminating in posterior mar- «. A channe, for drain body- ''^•^f^^rfe"i.u?'oiri.a^nK'o:^c.r 'illed^icin'^ „ir\^a''iJ??'"eV.^1?TeF''Jk- gin cephalic and caudal shields large, and about 8 point at which such channel leaves its source; apothecary, as dis- asje or the n. (t. [ < L. Ogmes; see Ogyg- Uhoee kept ready in the shop of an which water may rings. O-gyg't-a, g.) prepared bv prescrip- ipecifically, in mining, a levcil through n.-o-gyg'l-old, a. tinguished from humstnil. or those lAN ] - o-gyg'1-ld, useil as ejaculation evoked by any sud- ., -r". .1^....,,./ .>.,,! y^m^itl arc kninetiines looselv oil 0, interj. 1 . A natural consternation, wonder, admira- but an oMnnal drugls not "««=*«" den emotion, as surprise, equivalents, l" 1 "am" is amal-bosis, imine as'Jy^g^/'f; Sf"m». "i'H'o"L ^ , ^ properly beginning with a small letter OFFICIAL. (2) Noting a scientilic ,<.('. IKare.l Away from the land or tion, or delight: S?e "™J«' J ,v\!^.t',Vd, ""wuftl. either directly or "cimicifuga",„iu»ivii»fe« is".^ the,— OT^ici'iu/^..J,.-.- aground thatleans si-award. followed by an exclamation-point by a phurraacopteia;rmacopofia; as,no, ""{^iJ?,,,.,! t,;^, s,,,^.gal(l of a vessel and ^"K phrase. See O, iriterj. " : A usage..^u^^ now abandoned. Ph"- the end of the exclamatory name„im» J.fof blackhiack snakeroot "": a o-nu„.im/i.a„,i-mi, „.It- wpiii"'"".Ophidian. at ' tHH-n used in Aisthis guineas if he official ' has odc. Newly; lately. that he would give a hundred Itt wiUwill 1«1» ot«ierv«d ch. p. 50. [8. c. G. '77.1 ---bi.spicialspecial votevuie ofin thevm^ Committee^v...... ,^- i . q/1!Hill renewed.i^iiuwiiu. Mathews Moras «*> iitlr ! as,an. , . ehanire WAS made bj a — rv"i"" rpocV.]I foet. Often;Ulieii; aloneof itshrst . SSS|^upontLse'^nthde<»nnialreviMon)»toneofitshr.t0.lj«rti^theseventhdeeennialreviBion) «>,„ «« ^.^fn ^_i, r ,\ri'liftic_l Kepcated;Iten frequently V"5"„ ^Xrchalc] of O, inter}.'] pret.. 36. IL. 93.1 Same as O, inter}- [Form P(ior.«>.<:opa.ia o/ l . S. p. 2. SS£S&l«»r "';„«J!.'rt„ o|-,/eiilnes«, n. Frequency. . resistance. The ab- medicine. 3. occasions; many obin, om, n. The unit of electrical Employed in the arts or as a ^j^/p„„j;p on frequent or numerous resistance. (See 2 Bol policeman solute ohm Is equal to 10> C. G. S. units of Pertaining to or used in an apothecary-shop. frequently; as, I have o/Yen done so; a called also the BriUsli Associa- rirchaic] gy,ne; UNIT > The vruclica! ohm, opus, work, oft, adv., A8. «/'. J Isis resistanceicoioi^ii^.^ oficinalis, < 1. qgicina, workshop, < j-g ^^ ^^ exercise discretion. [ < < is18 (fgST0.987 ofor an absoluteaosoiuie ohm,oiiiii, andaiiu muthe t < LL. twice tion(to/i oAm,ohm-, iiol. Bearing more than 1 square millimeter In section ., •'-oft'eu=bcar"inK, a. of mercury V^ado, Sol , .^ of a column as prescribed as plants. meters In length. The Coiiams or legal okm. of-flcl-nal, n. ift(/. A drug compounded in a season, ,„i„,„- „rf„ At and I.OIMIS ef'n-taimz„„ adv. At Congress of ISM, Is a practica unit lienci, any drug or medicine kept on'en-tliiies", Sfn-taimz" or , adopted by the Electrical bythepharmacopceia; the length of the column repeated or frequent times; often. like that just defined, except that I^dv for sale. meters at the frcc7.1ng.polnt. The In- outward and phj-sical evil is hud open, of mercury Is 1.(16 n. A workshop. , . He to whom only the Congress of 189a ofB-cinet, ... wh.eh he ..called upon to ternational ohm adopted by the Electrli;al ef-ftsh'us, a. 1. Excessively forward, in k„„„eth, o//e»(,m/s but halt the evil reezlng-polnt. of a Vf-Weloun, »'' Is represented by the resistance, at the 1 service not desired euro. Hawthorke ftartet Letterch^io p. "«„ weighing kirdiiess" importunately interposing ",^* ^°; column of mercury 1.(163 centimeters In length and not one's concern; oft'tlmcs i. 4(XI of common Iron or asked- intermeddling with what is ort'en-sltlie8"+: oft'en-tldC't: 14 4521 grains. The resistance of feet an extraiie- Ophthalmic, etc. I h, 8. an ohm. officially intrusive, i. [Archaic] (1) Having of-tliai'mic, of-thal'my. telegraph-wire Is about , .» r< Dr G. 8. 0/ini, Oerman electrician.] obm'aa;. ' , combination of an SSanlerv^ieVr - ohin'=ain"nie-ler, n. A"'''^- A Xirran"<,^«1 (» ^^^^^''^^^^^^^Bi^E^!"^ ohmmeter and an ammeter, for electrical measuring.— ohin'ine"ter. «. A galvanometer having a dial or scale graduated to ohms and fractions of ohms, for measuring the sec OFFICE, «.] "Knct.^^^^j^^ ri(er>. See ocii hone. miles tains' here. o-hon', o-hone', ... , oj^ng'; we have twenty «(«icAo, walk. 1 • • series of six medieval as, a good ,ticto, row, < ,. v .i„„ oi'cos. elcBs, u. 1. Ahc. Pros. A lying in the oDIiia and molding having m section two trimeters. A large three-masted steamer ... was „.„ee', O-jI', «. 1 . Arch. (1) A Greei Anacreontic dimeters, followed by miles Sistant pullmg eagerly the of the three tiaU boaU could be seen a few "rg^.^ree or long 8 curve. (2) A pointed 1 Sr CT A hnnn or ode said or sung at end y//////, Gr, oitos, olkoa, toward t^ m™^ formed of two such Curves. !i. A sixth ode In a canon of odes. IC] l< < TrntUfTin Siberia cb. 32. p. 368. [G. P. P. 13.] arch in any house.] oi'koHt. . . ^. * or,.• 8-shaped-j-i—^-^ — curve,-, —"as^used; ., ... *. to be reserved or I,,,reversetic. u- — having the form of. oiri-l.,^'is"ref^^h,II EBIS, oi iDi. VI HI ."", a-.. Penned----- Written also -old, mMx. Like; resembling; ornamental construction. an- in manner; unsociable; shy. chiefly English scientific adjectives and nouns; as, distant . ., u * G. OGIVE, the ogive presenting to m discharge-pipc at the bot- O. [< hydroid. F. -olde, < h.-otdes, oiriet, Sf'let or ef'let, n. A an ogee curve when viewed m Ctroid, ovoid, celluloid, (< the eye ados, form, < root of idem- see.] tom of an artificial waterway. . < Gr. -o-eidls, -Bdls, < ex- persiiectiveCULIVC fromllV^lll belov\'.]u^iiii-.i ef-print', vt. To reprint (an ^ <• n ,.,.,-f ill o-id'i-trm, n. Bot. A form-genus of naked- o IT'prl lit', 9f -print' or — Ogee roof, a roof having acrose.scc- O-Id'i-um, from a magazine. vine-niildew (0. Turken) and cerpt); as. the article is oftw-tHterf Uon like that of an ogee arch.— reversed spored fungi, including the or para- superficial white olTprlilt", «. A reproduction of an article „ a cymarcversa molding, various other leaf-parasites, forming a recent coinage. Soc. parasites, as erai.h printed in some publication: of o'eer, ra. Ogre. Phil. An Ogee. growth. It also includes several human take the off"«nd'dle, «f sad'l or ef-sad'l, ti«. [S. Afr.] To „g%„a-ni'tlont, n. The growling of a dog. ScMnleinii, the scald-head fungus, and 0. tonsurans, of the alpha- O. saddle from; unsaddle, as a horse. eg'am, n. 1 • Any character fungus. Gr. 5o«, egg.] ^ oe'liam, WA the //«r»«« or bald-spot [< young man. starting up spasijcxlioally, can I '^^ Celtic peoples in the British section Aunt.' said the "<--"=>-^ ^ jj^ j^jglj ^nd OI-Eop'sI-da, ei-gep'si-da, n. pi. Conch. A of-aaddUf Olsvk SaiRKlSEa Story of an African Farm pt- j islands previous having eye» of decapod cephalopods, variously ranked, ch. p. 240. [B. BROS. „..j • iif 6, v.- I. to the 9th cen- contact with That which is uncovered so that thev may be in immediate ofl''BCOur"lng, 8f'scaur-ing or ef'-, n. tury; a combina- open, is vile water, as in loliginids. etc. [< Gr. oignymi, + scoured off; hence, rejected matter; that which tion of straight vision] CE-gop'sl-da-t; Ol-gop'sI-dseJ. or despised; refuse. placed gen- opsis, lines — ol-gop'sl-dan, o. & n. Synonyms: see dregs. at right ol-gop'«ld, erally ei-ki-o-mi-az'ma-ta, ri. i>l. Hy- oirttc-iini",Sf'scuni-oref'sctnn-, n. Refuse or scum. ol"kl-o-mf-a»'ma-ta, A Stone Found In Kerry, Ireland bear- angles to a base- proceeding from household ». [off'set'; off-set'ting.] "Nocatl giene. Morbific exhalations ofl""Bet',Sf8et'oref-set', Ing in Oghams the Inscription ijng There were pollution.] over against another; balance; Nocat, conditions. [< Gr. oikos, house, -+- miasma, I. I. 1. To set off, or set Magi Maglret" (The Stone of in twenty letters rub, soak, or treat with oil, a» one demand by another. the Son of Macrelth). oti ell vt- 1 . To smear, as, to offset ^^^ alphabet. anoint 3. To apply oil conferred by the system in one direction, may be leather, paper, silk, etc. 2. To An advantage beenDeen merely tree runesruuen wuoll"v™,,-constructed on lubricate with oil; disadvantage produced elsewhere. Wayland and 1-HA- The1I.O Oghamslyyiiiniiiii seem1-.^ to havenave to the bearing parts of, as a machine; offset by a f . ..a,._.._. : ;„1.^ Tl.„ 1,.lah ra,mpi1iwl the OffftomsOnhnntS 'S6.1 ditEerent principle. The Irish regarded the ch. 23, p. 366. IsB. * CO. a somewhat - ...... i- smooth and pleasmg; as, to Political Economy • * . ...j. figuratively, to render FtN characters beingbe•ing • trees,' f^*"!*!teada; while hence, i a forest, the individualual offset method. 3. ft. measure (land) by the ' ' «-"- .«. .^ T.vr.n. The Al- flattery. 2 Sui-r. To oovueach ^i™,.cross =stroke is called a twigtwig,' fleasg. Isaac Taylor ot/ speech with (land) into ter- '83 set-off in. 4. To form If, 226.-"-. [K. -p.- « CO.--* postmasterehipe and seata ^rcA. To make a plmbetjjinmci vol.*"i. "iii, ch.vAA. 8,17, §e », p.f L — — ">'J That diplomatic suavity which leads to make an offset in. ... has even been known to oiJ a dull fel- races. S. Pipe-niting- To The system of writing by means of such characters. in the General Court. as in printing the 2. into Congress, t Print- 'to smut on the back, such characters. *• [O-J low's way oo r« w •- i>rt 'Mil II 3 An inscription written with Tragedy ch, 3. p, 28, [H. M.» CO. 80.) set-off, m. [«n trary, and Is unknown insoluble in water, but [l, i P. '59,] ASA Orat How Plants Oraw pt, i. 1! 102. p, 39, misunderstand ng. but it Is »« oils are divided been adopted through a always in ether. VeBetable and animal curved or irregular main architectural writings since that date.J"" 4 Sum, A line drawn from a nuent occurrence hi according to their properties Into Mt,/ oj/;Cf'' ''''".,»"5 assist in meas- summit, Ar. airj, sum- '»™' line at right angles to an auxiliary line, to IF,, < LL. atigiva, < It. avge, < volatile or extential oils. Fatly oils »",,y, ''J'f.™< piece join- . Pertaining to an ogive paper and like /"l nring areas or in plotting. 5 . A forked metal mit ]—o-gi'Val, a. Arch. 1 by ability to communicate to J.i»"' lliose of ;eKfI«We running-gear of a vehicle. 6. Arch.s, diagonaTrib. 2. PerUuning to the Pointed style in a permanent translucent grease-siiot, ing parts of the or by pressure, butaid- terrace 8. Ma- use inexact, as the ogive is not exclu- or gin are ob.al.ii.l .lilefly from seeds PHrU- Same as set-off. 7. [U.S.] A architecture; in this portion of animal f»^, .™"': use oils are h1 ly i he llquhl . comparatively thin place in the length of sively characteristic of Pointed architecture, and its nml palmitic, ana sonry. (1) A oosltlon the futtv oils are glycerlds of stearic, plane of a wall;. incorrect. ,., X. recess below.— the general-. , pointed arch is therefore _ .. slowly absorb oxygen from oa wall.W..I. (2) A ™ -o for a , , S"elc acids. Tho'sc fatty oils that bend in a pipe o'gling.] I. t- To look at in tcriiied or siccn- a sunk panel. 9. Mpe-Jtlting-Pipe-Jilting- (1) A o'gle, O'gl, v- [o'oled; the air, forming a varnish, are drying - • pamts, ett^ — --«„ 1,1* of,iif butiiii. parallelParallel witwith, the- line of or admiration, or with coarse familiarity. are used in mamifactunng bringing one part out coquetry tivp iiils. and teniied same re- admix- impose on exposure to the a r are part. (2) A,. ,..,pipe-fittingg effecting the„„ ^. „,,^ j,iBs chuzjlewits with the least Tlwse "irdc" another ^^ ,^,, ,^^ In soap-making, as food, .. .A ,,. _ 1 . .1 !„.,., ..ir-i... offshootiiflnhnnt oilH, and are used suit, l6. [Kare,] A descendant; offsi.ring; to„ of banter in hi» admiration. i.oi.-ilrviiig ., [E.r, ..,.««L. 86, blankkt,- o.^glariH, n. DICKENS Martin Chuzzlewit ch. 4, p. 81. * | l"n".'.Ve!lT.?l'"''et"""i>senti«l '"'« — oir'»*etsblan"kel, n. See used''i/li'.'S?;,'In pertuinerj"v\'^idana closer anpu- tile nrlncllilis of iiliints. lu.d are A glass lubricator.cup flattened on one side for admiring, coquettish, or coarsely familiar of I'yd™';"^"^ an onset. A II i To cast SedKne.'' (iinnl 'ally tmy are composed catlon.— o.'pipe, '• 1. A pipe having !4. oogen, eye, oog, eye,] coiupuu ds «' Sec glances. [< MD. agheten, < < or mixtures of hydrocaib.ms will, branch-pipe.— o.sMhoet, n. Print. oils form a "oS- under set-off. — o.s hydrogcn, and oxygen, JlinernI •'"Sf.f™;,* set-off sheet, look; side Include l"'t'- n. Surw. A graduated •Ic', are generally thought u tl led from peat, shale, etc. They measuring offsets. gliii(ance. . anima and , v been fori. e-<;»»P'' "l''',?^ra. woto owl i ,. „, v »"™",.,..,.-th<- "P^™.-'--- root-word, we have seen to how great an / With COquettlBh obtained byhy pressurei.ressure (cold=exprrssrdicoioiexprt-sseM Given a single new "||;,„ n'gling, M. The a.(A Of viewing a'jd hot.ex- is performed at ordinary teninerature, ..tea. the oram.Trou/glaSces, tion being called ^-f^^^^IUSS",^ ZT:^^^^':^. [MAC '66.) pressed when heat Is employed, t^ie residue «.n. baineasoLio.i,.iiie ~. o.-.v> _ — seeBBASCH. viino,o'ltHo. . ^ : ^ STnonyms:STiionyin»:8eeBaASCH, aUle, obey, n6; not, n«r, atom; fu„, rfile; b„t, burn; = ov^, eight, | = nsagi^TT.n, machine, g = r.ew; ;;7a, arm, ,sk; .t. fare, Record; el.m.n, ,r . -,.. , . ... —...... , . , . . •. . ., . ..,

oil 13123 oil tHi'cake). Coldtdrawn oil is the result of the first ex- oil; as, anofMiff/UstuiSng-box.— olhtree, n. Any one of pretufon without the aid of heat — the first quality of most various trees yielding oil. Specifically: (1) Theoll-pahn of Source. Use. expressed oils. See table b«*Iow. western Africa. Ci) The Illupl of India. (3) The castor- Bark and buds Ciutia- [< OF. oile, < L. fAedtit: cp. (ir. elaion, olive-oil.] oil plant. (4) The Chinese varnish- tree {J/^«rf>>( cordata). — n. liot. Same as vitta.— n. momum Cassia Perfumery. . V. Oompoands, etc. ; — a cut of oil {Saut.). the amount oll*tube, oibwell, A ca8s Inchureh othces.as (li oil of ealerliuineiiH, first oil-well was sunk near Tltusvllle, ce'dar-o Shavings Juniperus Vir- used ui anoint candidates tor baptism; vi) oil of chrlHiii, Penn., by Col. E. L. Drake, in 1:^9, and giniana Scenting V. used at baptism, conflniiation, etc.; (3) oil of the ttiek, up to 1S92 more than fiO.(KXt wells had cerer-y-o Fruit and leaves Apium. used at extreme unrtlon. been drilled in IVnnsylvanla and adjoin- ing Stares.— lo burn or conHuine graveolens Medicine V. Th«^*e HhriveMed hands have deeper stains tlie to study late Into eev'a-diria-o. Seeds Schcenocauton qf- Than htAy oil can cleanse awa;. Diidnight oil* the night. Jicinale Medicine LowKLL Extreme Vnction st. 1. Cha'bert o Oil turpentine, 3 parts; — nitrobenzene Whence is thy learningl Hath thy toil oil of bitter almonds, animal oil. I part . imitation O'er books cftngumed the midnight oilt Medicine. I a« derived fnjm coal-tar.— oll^baB;'', «. bag (C«H5N<)j A Gay Fables, Shepherd oTid Philoso- chaul-moo' I Seeds of species Gyno- containiuK ^11; speeifleally, an oH-tH-arlnK cyst or gland fu gra-o pher I. 16. > cardia Medicine... animals.— oil'*bee''tlp. n. A large blaek wlnxless melotd che'no-po'dl- Chenopodium anthel- — to strike oil, to bore Into a stra- ( beetle with short winji-'-overs. When alarmed oll-beetlea um-o.io S minticum of petroleum; Medicine V. emit from the Joints of the legs an oily liquid wltli slightly tum hence, figuratively che-qul'to-o... Fruit to attain Combretum buty blistering proiR-rilfs. and they are often used Instead of or l\J. S.j. fortune or profit raceum suddenly, as fortunes Food V, mixed with eantharides.— oihbird, n. \, The guacharo, cher'ry«o Kernels I^unus sero- were once made In or great goatsucker, -i. The Aretie fulmar (FulmaruM tina the oil-regions. Flavoring. ylaciaiiJt). 3- A Ceylonese froginouth {Batrticfio»tomtia chI-ron'1-JI-o,, Kernels Buchanania nioRi//}7i^).— oilibolllp, n. [Local. I'. S.] A shark's egg — oll'er-y, n. tatifoUa Food V. In the oviduct.- olliboXt " A journal-box that holds a [-IE9, /V.] 1. An cln-cho'na-o. Cinchona- bark Medicine V. supply of oil-— olbbUMh, «. Much. A A receptacle er the manner of b, the Nardtis perfumery drill-cable is wound when with- \ Ina Journal-box. especially In a railway axle-box. for hold- oil smoothly and ^•^ clove-o Buds, stalks, bark drawing the drdrill-tools; br, rope connect- of s Perfumery^ ing lubrlcatlng-oll.—oil'cloth^. «. 1. Fabrics. Coarse (^Ultliyniitollv as,na 'anifiiSUIIU- . . cloves ingtn^ the ballboll -wheel with the driving.drivin \ soap V, cloth eoatt'd with while lead ground In oil. and ornamented nc aCKlflOWS OUtllJ. whe^hrfiD; rf.derrick (incliidinif thewhole coal«o. . Petroleum Burning M printed pnlterns: with used as a floor- or sbelf-coverliiK, Coc'cu-lus In'- i 8eed.flnrtm*r(a ~ oil 'I - neitSt, tl. of the hitch framework); dp, palley rar- Coccu- •^. AtV/m*. etc. 1 on » pare lixoleim. A tarpaulin.— oil* dl-cus o... liis The quality of be- "^ing the driU-cal.Ie; e. engine supplying j Arts V color* n. 1. Paint made from a pigment mixed with oil. Po^pp *« the driviny-wbe^l; r. sand-reel; co'co-nut-o. _ Fruit coconut-palm Candleg,soap V, iHfe\nir oilv grtai*l-trrensl t£. A painting produced In such pigmenu.— oil*cnp, n. A 0"y. H, gand-pump rope; sp, pnlley for sand- cod'-Uv'er o.w Liver of codfish Med., arts... A net*8; UnCttlOllsnesS: small vessel nequenlly made of brass, with glass sides, and pump rope: r, temper-screw for lowering cof'fee-o.. Coffee -berries Liqueurs V. holding and feeding out oil for lubricating; a lubricator: hence, the quality of drillinff-tools; tr,well;irb. walking-beam, co-huue'-o. AttttUa Cohune Suhst. coco aUo. an oil-can for olUng machinery.- oil de rotiet« n. flowing or moving eonnectiny with drive-wheel and well; nut-oil V. Same as attar or boheh, under attab. See rohk-oil.— t*°k. smootlily.— Oil'- '«• co-pal'ba-o Copriifera ojtcina I is ... .\Medicine V. oiliderriek, n. A tower-like fratni- used In tKtrlng oil- co-ijul'to-o.... Frait leMi, a. Not having or not containing oil; as, an oilUss £3seismeluuococca Soap V. wella, to »iupport and operate the various tools. — oihdiH- co'ri-an'dcr-o. Fruit Coriandrum sa- lamp; an oi/^&^ nut.— oll'ouMt, a. Oily. ribaior, ti. ytiut. A device by which oil Is spn^ad over tivum Medicine.... the surface of the waves, to calm tlieto in a Ktorm.— Varikties of Oils. olh cot'ton-seed'- t Seed GossypiumS Soap, lubri- dresM* "•/>'• The dn-gs of nil.— oll'dried, ". Having o.is xplanations. S Bttrbadeiise } cant Its oil exhausted: a«. an oH^tlru'il lamp. - oilifurlory* '' A — animal F — fixed + - drying cou'mu-o... Nuts of varieties OCno- \ Cooking, Il- factory ft>r the extraction, or lonmilxture of A n'flning. E — essential or M — mioeral * « noB^arying cfjrpiM ( lumlnant. F. oil aa fuel oils.— oilifuel, n. UKed for steam-generation. volatile V — vegetable crab-o.i* Cftrapa OuUnienais Soap, lubr.. F. metal'Worklng. etc.— oilignge, n. 1. An oleometer. In many Instances under "Use," In the third column, cress' -seed' o. Lepidium. sativum Burn., soap. F.t li, A irajfi-Klaa* forshtiwing the level of oil In a tank. etc. only the principal uses are given. croc'o-dlle*o.. Indian crocodile Leather* — oihiiUH, n. llluminatlug-gas or heating-gas made by dressing F.» distilling oil m clow'd retorti>. — oihirildlnff, ». Gilding Croton Nahk. Source, Use. Kind. cro'ton-o , Tiqlium Medicine., F.« with oil-sl/e.— olligland, ». An ofl>M>ereting gland, as cu'beb-o Fruit Piper Cifbiba Medicine. E. In »omi- pUnts; sp«-elh<-itlly. the glatid at rhe rump of a a'eom-oll Fruit of the English oak cn'cum-ber- { SeedH curuiiiber, \ .M e (I i c I n e bird whlrh secretes oil for ttie dn-Khlng of the plumage. o.i».... it^uercHs Robur) Artt s pumpkin, etc ( burning. .. V. F.t — oiliKlnb«*, n. Mmh. \ ifiohulur liibrlnttliig device. Arha-ha'ca o. ,Tolu balsam Arts cum'ln-o Seed CunUiiuin Cymi- \ Flavoring, — olhhole* ". A hole In a Jnaehlrie-fniim' liv which oil alm'ond*o.i.. Almond-kernels Med., perf... num \ perfumerv E. may be liiiroduced to a bearing, etc. - oll>JH<-k, «. A al'oes'o . Aloes Arte cus'cus-o Andropogon muricatus Perfum.,etc. E. plteher-shaped metal vessel for heating ». * oH.^oil'man* am'ber-ii . Oum amber PTiar., med. cy • pe rus A maaufaciurer of or dealer In oils.— n. oiltmlllf 1, A ao'da^ Seeds JtMttmeMa prin- \ Pharmacy, grass o Root Cj/peruK esculentus Food F.« Krindlfig-mlll for pulverizing fruits, seeds. nuta,etc.. pre- cept i lllunilnant da))'lia-o Tubers Dahlia pin mUa. Arts., E. paratory to exprewlnc their oil. 'i, \ manufactory of an-gel'l-ca-o. . Root A ngtlica offtciiia- daph'ne-o Daphne Mezereum. Arts F.» vegetable oils.— olliBni, u. Any one of varloua oil-) ield- Om Art* dcad-o.i* Coal-tar Source car- Ing especially the huffalo-nui, nutaor weds, the huttemut. AD'fnia-tu'rao. Anguatura baric Arta bolic acid.. and the seed of the castor-oil plant.- oil of banion an'1-iln-o |€oal-tar Solvent dlll-o Fruit Peucedanum [Humonius, Rare), a haatlns; a whipping or beating. o.x.. an'l-mat ; Bones.. Medicine.... graveolens Perfumerv.. E. arap'ioll'':.— oil of blrcli or (rarely) of oak. 1. an'l-»eed>o.... Fruit Pimpinella ant- Medicine, Seeds (.'alophyllum \ Medicine,

HumomuK. | whipping '( I A with a birchen or oaken swltcn; irum, etc flavoring. inophyllum Illumlnant F.t a beating. an'lse*o.s Same as anlseed«oll . . dog'wood-o. Berries Cortius san-\ Food, soap, And gie their bldea a aobla nrry, Wi' oti ofaik. an'(hra-C(nie< Artlliciai an- burning.... F. Coal-tar f'ulnea \ V. Buftira Prai/erfor Adam Armour it. «. [ thracene.., da'Kong»o... ubber species du-J Medicine,

*4. Sec BiRni-niL. In table.— olltpalnt.n. I*alntmade by a'pr1-cot*o..., Apricot-lcemels Adultenint.. gongs \ food . F.» ar a^his-o.4.. Subset, mixing a nhcment with oil, aa dlatlngutahed from a water- Seeds Arackin hup^>g»' ol.-oil egg-o. . Yolks of eggs. Medici ne ar gan-o suhsr. color.— oil -*\ InlnMiiir.u inn. Ill-' iiiui'-s; alao. JC mfiitnococcut of balm-o Metima uglcinaliJi. Perfumery E. dente Medicine.. . E. tropical .\merlcH. -nlliplani, n. Same bkxnb.— haa'll-o Hoots sweet basil KhiV))rlng. E. Medicine. u slla «"J*;»;'>'P*\"«' species Eucalyptus. rt. has'K|-a*o.s.. Soap, illiiin.. \ prriMt, A hydraulic or screw press for expressing the S«eAtBa»tatatifotta... , F. \ perry, etc. .E. uUfrom fniiiD.nuts. etc.— ollfpariffer* bay' ber'ry • |Le.ve.ir„r<«.a^r. *«»?;•'.»;•-„ eu'la-cbon-o.iB Oolakan Subst. cod< n. An apparatus through which refuse o.* bay E. liver oil... . F. and dirty oil gathered from the drinplngs bay-o Berries l/iurnn tiobHin Medicine... E. eu-phor'bl-a- of machine-bearings, etc.. may l>e cleaned bean*o Chinese ull- liean Food. Ilium. F.t o." Euphorbia Lathyri$.... Medicine .F.

- < for further use.- oll*rinK. ». I. A ring beech ' nut Soap. Illuml- fen'nel-o... Fruit Fivtiiculum of-{ Perfumery. > 'SntMPagufiirjflPatkxt \ '( sorroundlnir a horizontal J

'( ?1. A river on whose banks natural oil |« hyba i candU>s compounds sences

ound. *i, A river on which oil Is con- birch-o . Bark BetuUi alba Manuf. Mun- ga-lan'gal-o.. Root Alpinia officina- veyer! for ixjM.rt; aa, the (rilrrirrrt Im-- flian leather rum Medicine... V.I tween Lagirs find the Cameroona. Africa, black'fish»o. . Blackfish reetaceans)... Lubricant. gal'ba-num-o. Gum galbanum 1 It c e n B c noted for their export of palm-oil. An Oil •press. black'-mus*- i Seeds BraiHica or Si- tarnish... v.. W. 1)1 LKE Pr'tiilriiiM of firfitter Itriiain MaU with raised urd o napit nigra Pharmacy.. 8ile-o Leaves Murira Gale Arts p. «7. [MAf M'wi black'-pep'per al-llp'o-llo.. Fermented var. olive-oil ] olfirnbber. n In •dire* an attached Dyeing, F. engravlnif. n Hiiiall roll f woolen cloth above and below Piper nigrum.. Medicine gar'llc-o Bulbs Atlium «ffWr?/;/(..'MedlcTne, E. for«-I*-anlnL' phit's. t-ti-. -oiliNafp, n. A each |4»Se, and tb« blad'der-nut* gen'llan-o Root Gentiaua lulen \rl E. tank for «t..rlinf oil. ollmaHd, » A malerial. •oeloaad Kernel hladdemut... ge-ra'ni-um-o Species of Fclart/ouhau I'erfumery E. sandftnuf (»'! in 111 "\ -n'krir.ii. through tn prsariac-f^oCha, Mast'lng-o. Nitroglycerin* gln'ger-grasti' (Andropogon .Sf-iitf Adulter, at ta whlrh oil I- 'Inklni; wells.— |rta«sd bstweea bod'y-o Whale's blubber Lubr. Ilium. S nanthus tar of roses E. "***"• oiliwardiiM -(•Indian dupe* .*.,_P?P*t boiled o Unseed-ollbolledwlth ^ jManufHrturc gin'ger-o Root Zingiber o,fftrinale Flav.. med.. E. ..(.1 drier. of paints • - n«h"''' gold* o f ( Seeds C'ameiina sa- Burning "'.V**'"7,' tor llw eotlaSion bo'mah-nut*-o Bomahnut. Cooking picas' ure o., S tiva stmp, etc.. . F. '; of the oil. bot'tle-nose'- grape' stone' Lubr,, burn- Seeds vint/era. oIlve*olI ViWf ''atnelinn »atlrn): Cheap So^.. ing, etc.. . F. •oil seed. (4) The Llnseed-oll distilled Kr*gen-o Gurgen-balsam Pharnmcv (, an Kast-Indlan with brick-dust Medicine.. '«el-o.«.... Hazelnuts Perfumery + .leiding a lanip-oll Brtflsho Rubefacient liniment.., Medicine. he'dc-o'ma-o., Hfdeoinii pulegioides. Medicine. F.i: I. ml -h,, . Uv rcK-k containing but'ter-nut-o. Fruit Otruocar n uci hemp'-stfed o. Lighting, : Seed hemp-plant.... (Mliniinrk. One o? y'erutn. vU' , or henip-o... soap F.t van-' . > (111. Ill A galeorhlnold cade-o wood Jnniperus com hen'bane-o Seed Hyoscyamus niqer Med., etc F.» Bhark • ('^ The basking shark. tnunifi Skln-dlseaaes hlck'o-ry-nuf { Seeds species of Ca- \ Lubricant, • oil I lltiHeed-rdl mIxed with eaj'a-put-o.. Leaves Melaleuca Caju S rya ) Ilium tnant F. »oin< A pnti Medicine,.. hon'est-y-o. , which, when par- Hesperis matrnnalis Arts F.t lUllv lo NurfHces.- oil* cal'a-ba-o.. Calophf/llitm Cnlabn... Illumltiant. hop-o Flowers Uumulus Ln-

. Root AcoruM Calamus.. Perfumery. nnirll detennlnes profit- ral'a-mus-o puliis Flavoring. . E. able i.. .- .'M ,,- M. -,.,.i"'"d ability to di'tect cam'o-mllc-o.s Flowers Authemtn no- horse' -chest' Fruit horse-chestnut the etroleum, maltha, btttM Medicine... nuto tree Medicine... F. or cither oilv '»r blinmltiouH mattiT. wtih or without admlx- cam'phor-a* horse' inintV ttm- nf .^ IT. r iillintoek. ". li- f. ''ft. A metal vessel ted o Camphor In ollve-oll. .. Medicine. . Monarda punctata.. Medicine E. 'I for ,. oil; a rhrl(«ni!iiory,- iiiln»|ove, n. cam'phor.o.. Camphnra oJUctnarum Illumlnant. borse'rad'lsh- \ Roots Cochlearifi Ar- vt'i t iJri/nbfilaii'tpH A

I (o, = cmt; oil; !& = feud, }Q = future; o = k; ctaorcta; db = tAe; sine, ipk; so; tbin; slisa«ure; F. boA, dttne. <^fr

oil l^e24 ointment

Name. Use. Name. Source. Name. Source. Distillation cannel-coal. Manuf. gas. wax-o Beeswax Medicine Berries Juniperus com- par'af-fln-o. . Ju*nl-per-o whale-o.*3. Blubber species of Illumlnaut, munis Medicine. par'sley-o.... Fruit Carum Petroaeli- J Pei-fumery.. V. E. whales ( etc A. Ju'pft-tl-o Fruit HftpUki uxdigera.. Soap num com- pat-chou'ly-o. Leaves Pogostemon wbeat-o Bruised wheat Medicine V. F. ln-na'rl*o Nut Canarium occideu' Pitchouli Perfumery.. V.F. white'-ce'dar I Leaves Thuya I muHf Adulter., i Ullis Medicine., V. E. tree |Soap, perf . peach '-ker'nel ' . Seeds Bomean ka'li-ow-o Peach-kernel -, V.E. white'-mus" ke-en'a-tel-o. .Seeds CtdophyUum to- o flavoring. V. peari'O Jargonelle pear. Flav. confec- tard o Seeds Brassica alba.. V. F. . Burning.. F. m*Htos»m Alcohol and sulfuric ke-ku'ne-o.«».lFruli Aleurius Moluc tionery.... V.E. wlne-o America, acid Arts., V. cana Burulng.arts F.t pen'ny-roy'al I In Hedeomn I wlne'-stones' 'Species of Stilrndora... Arts. ... F. pulegioide^ Medicine V. F. kl-ku'el'O Seeds grape Lamps, salad V.F. krum'holtr-o. Balsam Piiiii" Pttmitio.. Medicine £. pep'per-o ruit I^per nigrum Medicine.... V.E. wln'ter-green- kun'dah-o.5«.. Fruit Carttpa Toulon pep'per-mlnt. '. 0.44 Gaultherta procum.bens Med., p_ varnish.,.. V.F. lard-o I Fat of hogs Burninp,art8 F. ange worm'secd'- f Seeds Cheiiopodium lau'rel'O ^Lnnrm uobUis Med. .solvent E. pho8'pho-ra*- t Phosphorus inalniond' ' 0,4« anthelminticum. Medicine Iar'en-der»o...|Specle8 0f Lavandttla.. Med., arts. E. ted o oil Medicine V.F. S Bassia buty- worm'wood'- Iftv'en-der- phul-wa'ra-o.. Kernels j Medicine, soap V.F. Artemisia Absinthium Medicine flow'er o, Fresh lavender Perfumery E. racea \ Myristica sebifer'a Soap,candle8 le'dum-o Ledum palufttre Arts E. pI-men'to-o.3«. Fi-ult Eugenia Pimenta Medicine yam'a-dou'-o Sangui- zac'hun-o Balanites jEgyptiaca. Medicine » Leaves Andropogon \ .-Vdulterant, pim'per-nel-o. Root Poteri^im lem'on-grass* angustifoUa. Arts sorba Medicine. . zak'koum-o. Elasagnus o.«» \ cilmtus \ perfumery lemon-fruit Perfumery.. pine'ap'ple-o.. Crude butyric ether Candy.flav. "O, i", lem'on-o Rind uf SynonymB : allspice-oil American woraiseed-o. Perfumery, plne-o Resin Pinus maritime.. Burning iem'on-thj'me* Serpyllum. andlrobfl-o.H, bank-o.ss, banks-o.ia, benne*o.4', bitter- \ Thymus etc pi'uey-o Seed Valeria Indica Candles n, -J — almond 0.1, bone-o.ii, cabbage-o. 38, carap^o. cedrat-es- let'tuce«o. Lactuca rirota Arts pl'qul-a-o Fruit Caryocar Brasili- sence o.i'.chamomlle-o.s, clock»o. *2,colza«o.38,dIppel-o.2, llglit-o Coal-tar naphtha Varnish ense Arts domba-o.i^, earthiuit- or peanut«o.<, flaxseed-0.28. flea- inac-o.... Flowers Syringa vulga- pls-ta'chlo bane«o.i8, g;ard en. spurge 0.20, Gaultherla o.«. glngelly- Pistachio-nut Burning V.F. riK Perfumery.. V. E. nut" o or glnglUo. 41, goosefoot'O. i", gourd-o. is, graln«o. -i, grape- varieties of \ lilies, oil of.. Flowers of Zilitim can- plum-o Kernels Burning, seed 0.22, grass-o.'-", groundnut-o.4, heavy 0.16, Uang-Itang adulterant. V.F. didum Perfumery plums ( o.*, Illicium-o.», illupio-o.s, kidney .0.*', kukul-o.», myr- Seeds Myristica Mala- llme'O Fruit Citrwt medica Perfumery poon'dy-o.. cla-o. 6, nagkassa-o. a>, namur-grass o. 27, narcissus-o. 24, nut- barica Medicine... V.F. Un'den-o Flowers Tilia Europaa Perf.. food.. V. E, 0.23, o. of 8tralts2». oolakan-o.i9, orange-flower o.^*, par- ni- Un'seed'-o'". Seed Lin itm usitaUsst- \ Arts, paints,; pop'lar-o. . Leaf-buds Populus tridgeberrv-o. 44 petroleum-o.-ii. philosophers' o. J, porgle- Arts V.E. mum ) etc.. V. F.+ gra 0.29, potatbosplrlt o. 21 pulas-o.^, purquelra<=o.i",rock-o.3i, Seeds varieties of poppy Burn., paint. V. F. Lon'don o. DIstfllatiou of turpen- pop'py-o... rosewood-o. ^, santonlca-o. 46, seed-o. '3, 28, Blrio-o. 27, spear- tine pop py-seed Seeds Papaver sotn- \ Adulterant mInt-0,32, 8weet-o.*, teeUo.4i, touloucouma-0.26, train- niferum "( of ollve-oillV. F, lorage*o... Leaves LevUUcum offici- o. 43, tree-o. «, tung-o. 4fi, ylang-ylang o. 9. nale Medlclne por'polse-o.. Fat of various porpoises Lubr., burn..jA. F. ma'bO'O A plant (Parinarium por'tia*nut o. Seeds Thespesia popul- otl'er, eil'fir, n. 1 . One who or that which oils. Specif- Mobola) Arts V.F. nea Burning ically: (1) A workman employed to oil engines or ma- burn. Ma-cas'sar-o. Fruit Stadtmannia Perfumery, pressed o. . Fat of the grampus Lubr., chinery. (2) Any automatic device for oiling machinery. Prov'ence o, Olive-oil from AIx Sideroxylon etc V. F. See ilfus. under compressor. (3) An oil-can used for pul'za-o.S'.... Physic-nuts Med., bum. macC'D Myristica fragrant.. Scenting V.E. oiling machinery. [Colloq.] coat of oilskin. Seeds of pmnpkin Medicine... 2. A 3. mad'1-a-o.. Seeds Madia aativa . . Like olive* pump'kln-o... Naut. vessel for transportation of oil. oil; burn.., V.F. py-re'thrum-o. Chrysanthemum Par- A loophole. eyelet- mah'wa-o.. Seeds Bassia latt/olia.. Soap, cook- thenium Arts oil'et, eil'et, n. 1. Arch. A 2+. An ing, etc.... V. F. rape-o.38. Seeds Brassica cam- ^ Lubricant, hole. 3t. Any bud, eye, or incipient shoot. [<0¥.(nllet, pesiris "( pharmacy. Mal'a-bar o... . Flsh-Iivers from Mal- Ligliting, dim. of (f.U^ eye. < L. oculus, eye.] oil'lett. abar soap, etc.. F. rav'en-sa'ra-o. Roots Bavensaraaro- S Adulter, es- oiP^paiiit'Mns:, oihrubber. oihsecfL etc. See oil. matica sential oils V.E. male'- fern' o . Root male-fern Medicine ( oll'skin'% oiT'ekin", n. 1. Cloth made water-proof with linseed-oU Man'f . paint, V.F. ma'mey-o .Fruit Lucuma Bon- rawo Raw drying-oil. 2. A garment of such cloth. plnndii Soap, burn.. F. red'-ce'dar 0. Leaves Junlperus Vir- giniana Perfumery.. A hard, foul-woather look was given to the picture by the men . Species of Manatus ll]um.,cook. F.t man'a-tec on deck beinir dresaed in blaek or yellow oilakins. man'go-steen*. (Seeds Garctnia Mati red o.. Hypericum perforatum ollve-oll Medicine V.E. W. C. Russell Strange Voyage ch. 12. p. 25. [H. '85.] S goHtana Pharmacy. and marc'-bran'dy rho'dl-um-o.3» Species of Convolvulus. Perfumery. V.E. oll'stone", eil'ston", vt. To sharpen or polish with oil- o Fusel-oil from brandy rose'-ge-ra'nl- ) Flowers of rose-ge- \ Adulterant stone-slips or with oilstone-powder. S ranlum 1 of rose-oil. mar-go'sa-o. . .\YT\x\X.MeUa Azadirachta Medicine um g oll'stone", n. A smooth slab or slip of fine-grained ajficlnallx.. Perfumery.. soap, etc.. V.F. rose'ma"ry«o., Rosmarinus stone, used, when moistened with oil, for sharpening Perfum., etc. rose-o Flowers of certain roses Perfumery . V.E. mKc'io-T%m'0.' Origanum Majorana V.E. edged tools, etc., or for giving a finish to metal surfaces. Distillation of rosin. . Arts V.F. ' Semecarpus Manufacture ros'In-o.^o mark'ing-nut'i Kernels — blnck oilstone, a kind of Turkey stone. See Tuk- \ Anacardium of paint. .. rue-o Buta graveolens Perfumery.. V.E. o j KEV.— (iil'M(niie:po\v"'dei*. n. Pulverized oilstone used Pharmacy saf'flow'er-o.. Flowers Carthamus Cooking, mas'soy-o Bark Ci7inamomum with oil for grinding and polishing metal surfaces.— o.ssHp, etc V.E. tinctorins { burning.. V.F. Kiamis n. thin piece of oilstone adapted in fomi to the edge to saf'fron-o Crocus satimis Arts V.E. A mat'1-co-o Leaves IHper auguMifo- be sharpened or the surface to be polished. Hum Medicine... sag'a-pe'num > Distilling gum sagape- E. oil'sslove", oihtree* oihwell* etc. See oil. mead'ow-J Flowers ^Spirasa Ulma J num... Perfumery. '" E. oU'way", oil'we", n. 1. M(tch. An oil-hole. 2. A fiweet'-o. S ria Flavoring.. V.E. sage-o Salvia officinalis Perfumery.. Perfumery, groove m a bearing-surface for the flow of oil. me'hu-dee'- Leaves Lawsonia iner- Ban' dal-wood" Santalum album.. ; medicine. oil'i, Pertaining to, mis Perfumery . E. oll'y, a. [oil'i-er; oil'i-e3t.] 1. Same as o1- sar'dlne-o Refuse sardines, etc. Arts F. containing, or resembling oil; as, an oily nut. 2. Seeds Cuciiml'i Melo^ rael'on-o.. ) - Root and bark Smilax 1 V e o 1 1 sar'sa-pa-rir I Smeared, rubbed, t^ouked. or coated with oil; greasy; as, Citrullus vulgariH. . ) Medicine E. lamps la-o i officinalis an oUu surface. 3. Slippery or unreliable in character; Adultera- sas'sa-fras-o. Root Sassftfrasoffictnate Med., flavor. E. men-ha'den- Menhaden smooth or deceitfully affable in speech or manners. tion, arts.. sav'In-o Leaves Juniperus Sa- o.« , | mes'tt-a-o.***.. Memta ferrea Med., burn.. bina Medicine E. The volubility of the oily village lawyer. mrgnon-ette'. seal-o Fat of various species.. Lamps.leath. F.^ H. W. Bebcher Lectures to Young Men lect. i, p. 19. [D. F. '56.] Crude petroleum Medicine E. oil Flowers Reneda odorata Perfumery.. Sen'e-ca o . — oil'yscalin", a. Smoothly calm, as If having on mirfoll-o Flowers Achillea Mille- sen'na-o Senna-leaves Medicine E. the surface.— o. strain, «. Same as bknke. folium Perfumery.. ses'a-me-o.tt. Seeds Sesamum Indi- <\ Adulterant o-i'iiiett inteiy. Alas! ah me! min'er-alo.'i. Petroleum Burning cum \ of olive-oil F. oi-iiocli'o-e, n. Same as (enochoe. mlnt-o" Mentha riridia Perfum., etc. shale-o Bituminous sbales Burning E. oi'uo-iiian"ry, ol'no-man'sl, ?i. Folk-lore. Divination by Livers species shark., Tanning A. F.' mir'bane-o... Nitrobenzene Perfumery.. ehark-o of means of wine. I < Gr. oinos, wine. + -mancy.1 niuo-doo'ga< shore-o A var. of cod-liver oil.., Medicine A. F. Oi"'no-iiia'ni-a,erno-m0'nl-a(w-mg'ni-a,7i. Same as dip- .(Seeds Seeds Butea frondosa.. Medicine. . . Sim 'bo-lee- o. Bergera Konigil. Arts V.F. somania. [< tir. oinon, wlne,+ mania.] Brasiliensis. etc mote-o Seeds Carapa Guia- 5 Lighting, sl-rln'ga-o... Seed Hevea Soap, V.F. ointt, vt. To anoint; administer extreme unction to. ne}i9is } medicine. V.F. skate-o Livers species of skate.. Adulter.cod" — oint'lnKsbox''t, n. A chrismatory.— oint'lng* mug' wort' -o. Root ArtevUtna vulga liver oil..., A. F. cloth"t, n. A cloth for applying oil in extreme unction. ris Medicine soap' -nut' o... Seeds Sapindus margi- oint'meiit, eiut'ment, n. A fattv preparation with a Same as ol nattts Medicine V.E. lard, lard and wax, or petrola- Seeds species of > butter-like consistency, as - Skins during tanning S Lubricant, 1 V e oil sod-o tum, with which some medicinal substance has been in- Brassica ) '( burning f>roce88 soap A. F. corporated: utied chiefly for external application to the my-rob'a-lan- ) Seeds certain Termi so'lar o stillation of parafftn. Burn., lubr.. M. E. i nalia Medicine... Span'Ish-wal"- M ediclne skin. Aleurltes Moluccana \ of which Is suf- myrrh-o. 3um myrrh Medlcln^. .. nuto arts The following ointments, the composition myr'tle-o Myrlus co/nmuniti Perfumery V.E. aperm-o Blubber of sperm-whale Tan., lubr... ficiently ln(U<->»te(i t)v thefr names, are official according to Pharniiuopa'lu: nintnient of carbolic acid, ointment uas-tur'tlum' t Seeds Nasturtium of- spike -o Lavandula Hpica Paints, varn the U.S. Jicinale Perfumery V.E. spruce-o Tsuga Ctiuadensis Medicine of gallic acid, nintnuMit of tsinnlc add, ointment of rose-wa- ) ointment, chrysarobin ointment, diachylon neats'foot*-o. Feet of neat cattle Lubr.. med A. F. 8un'flow'er«o. Seeds Helianthus ati- ( Burning, ter, belladonna nutgall ointment, ointment of ne-ro'll-o."*., Orange-flowers Perfumery. V.E. nuun \ soap ointment, mercurial ointment, oint- nig'er-o Seed Guizotia oleifera.. Food, lamps, V.F. sweet-bay o.. A volatile'laurel-oll.. .. Perfumery-. ammonlated mercury, ointment of nitrate of mercury, of yellow oxid of mercurv. ointment of red oxld of nrin-o Scale-insect ( Coccus).. Arts, med.. A. F.t sweet-flag o. Root Acorns Calamus.. Flavoring... ment ointment, lodofonn ointment, mezereuin noun'ga-o iitiHHia longifoiia i Soap-mak'g V.F. talc-o A former face-prepara- mercury, lodin tion ointment, tar ointment, ointment of carbonate of lead, oint- nut'meg-o Fruit Myristicafru- J Soap, per' , of lead, ointment of iodid of potassium, stra- grans ( fumery V.E. tam'bor-o, Omphalea oleifera. Medicine. V. ment of iodid ct-cho'co-o.. Dryobalanops Medicine V.F. tan'sy-o.. Tanacetum vulgare. Medicine.. V.E. monium ointment, sulfur ointment, alkaline sulfur oint- veratrin ointment, and ointment of oxid of zinc. o'dal-o Seeds Sarcostigma S Medicine tar-o Wood-tar Medicine.. V.E. ment, Besides tnanv of the foregoing, the following are official Kleinii \ burning . . V.F. tar'ra-gon-o... Artemisia Dracunculus Flavoring. V.E. acid, oint- ok'roo-o.. Seeds Hibiscus esculen- tea-o. ... Seeds Camellia theifera Food, med V.F. In the British PharmaeoiMeia: ointment of boric tus Food, phar V.F. Cosmetics, ment of salicylic add. ointment of aconltin, ointment of the'o-bro'ma- ) Seeds Theobroma old o Purified ollve-oll Lubricant. V.F. BupposltO' tartarated antimony, ointment of atropln, ointment of cal- S Cacao o'le-o»o Animal fat Artlf. butter A. rles V.F, amin, ointment of cantharldes. ointment of spermaceti, ol'lve-o.** Fruit Enropcm... Food, phar. V.F. thyme-o Thymus vulgaris Med., flavor. V.E. ointment of creosote, ointment of eleml. ointment of euca- om'pba-clne o. (ireen Arts V.F. to-bac'co-o.. Le&ves Mcotiana Ta-S Flavoring, lyptus, ointment of galls and opium, ointment of glycerin of oint- on'ions, oil of. Allium Cepa Medicine... V.F. bacuni ) medicine.. V, F. subacetate of lead, compound ointment of mercury, or'«ige-ber"ry to -bac' c( l^eed»Nicotiana Taba ment of red iodid of mercurv, diluted ointment of nitrate of ointment of Unripe fruit orange-tree Perfumery V.E. seed' o ) cum Varnish V. F.t mercurv, ointment of subchlorid of mercury, acet;itc'..f lead. t)lntment of sulfiirett-d potash, ointment of or'ange-leaf* ( Leavc;H of orange, bit lu'cum-o..., Fruit-pulp Astroca-S Medicine nint of .njivin, simple ointment, ointment of staves- o i ter or sweet Perfumery.. ryuJH vulgare ( soap resin, mint or'ange-o Fruit of orange, bitter Liqueur, per- tun'ny-o... Orcynmts thynnus Leather acre, ointment i)f ioilld of .sulfur, ointment of turpentine, j oxid of zinc, and ointment of oleate of zinc. or sweet ( fumery.... tur'pen-tine-o. Species of pines.... Varnish, ointment of or'ange-peel paint, med. The name of the ointment indicates the medicinal principle varies accorrling to circumstances. Fresh orange-peel Pharmacy. . V.E. ug'gur-o.... Aquilaria Agallocha Perfumery used, and the vehicle certain ointments whose com- or'ris-o Roots Iris Florentlna . Perfumery.. V.E. va-le'ri-an-o Root Valeriana offidna The following list Includes or'rto-roof o. A solid distillate orris- lis Medicine. position is not Indicated by the names: apo^illen* oiiit- root Perfumery va-nil'Ia-o.. Olive- or almond-oil fla- iiieiit. one made up of twelve various ingredients, from ou-«'be-o. Species Omphalea Lubricant... vored with vanilla. Flavoring... which number it was supposed to derive important medici- qualities; a preparation of olive-oil. 16 o-wa'la#o. Seeds Pentaclethra^ Lubrlcantv ver-be'na-o.. Lippia cttriodora . . Perfumery. nal bnimilieoii o.. Burgundy pitch, macrophi/lla ' food, soap. vi'o-let*o Viola (tdorata Perfumery. fluid ounces; yellow wax. yellow resin, and melted together 3 ounces of conunon pal'ma-ro'sa-o. Andropogon Schot- S Adulterant vir'gln o First yield ollve-oll. Arts each 1 pound; and together nanthtCH > of oils V. F. vlt'rl-ol-o Same as sulfuric acid Arts turpentine stirred In; blue o.. mercury rublx'd cease pAlm'-nut'o... Kernels Elseis Gnineen- wal'nut-o. Kernels Juglans regia Paint., arts. V. F.t with some vehicle, a.s suet, until the metallic globules Ms Soap wal'rus-o JBlubberof walrus Food, bum A. N.t to be visible: called also nurcunal ointment: citrine o., in nitric and polm-o Fruit, as of ElieiM Gui- watch'ma'-] > Pnrlfled olive-, wliale-, varj-lng quantities of mercurv dissolved add ollve-oll; o.* ( resin neetutis Soap.candltw kers' o,«. s or porpolse-oll Lubricant.. F. the hot solution mixed with lard and sofa. Arm, ^k; at, fare, jjccord; elgmfint, gr =: over, Sight, % = usage; tin, machine, | =s renew; obey, no; net, nSr, at^m; full, rule; but, bum; aisle; J

OiMiiiie 1935 oleomargarin

a mUtuiv of beeswax 2 parts, rrafn 5 parts, and lard 8 parts; mo nmwnw).— old lady In Threadneedle street, O'le-a, O'Ig-a, ti. Bot. A genus of Old World trees or siiuple o.t a mixture of wax aud lard, sometimes with the Bank of England: a nicknanK'.- old^liKlit. I. (' Fa- shrubs of the olive family ( Oleaces)^ with entire, leathery oIIvc-oIl. voring old prlDclplos; especially. In the Scutch Chun.-h, fa- evergreen leaves, and small, whitish, often fragrant axil- [< OF. (A/jnenient^ anointing, < oim/ne, anoint, < L. nn- voring union between church and state. II, /*. One who lary or terminal clusters of flowers. O. Europsea is the guo^ linear.] oine'ineutt. maintains oUl-Ugbt principles.- oldsline, ((. Following a common olive. [L., < Gr. elaia^ olive-tree.] Of-Hiii'ic. »ls(nlc, n. Same as Ossiaxic. well-l>eattn path of thought or policy; conser\ative.— old is C'le-a'ce-fBtO'lg-e'sg-I or -a'ce-e, n.pl. O-jib'wayt o-Jlb'w^-, n. SameasCQiPPKWAT. O-jib'wat. maid. 1. A woman who has not been married and Bot. An order regarded ay having passed the usual age of marriage: varl- of o^jo^ 6'b5. ri. [Sp. Am.} A Spring, especially one screened gamopetalous erect or climbing shrubs or trees, or by rank grass or rushes, o^ko^* ously applied, usually in derogation, 'i, A game of cards rarely herbs — the olive family — with opposite, simple or Played with a pack a card (.usually a queen) hag oke. Ok, n. A measure and weiKbt used In Turkey and Greece. from which pinnate leaves and perfect or unisexual flowers with 4- Turk, oira.j tjeeu removed. Tlie cards are discarded by matching them, SeeMKASL'RK; WBieuT. [< o'kati ok'kat. lobed calyx, 4'Clef t corolla, and 2 or rarely 4 free stamens. and the plavt-r who holds the immatchable card is "old o^ken*I(e, O'ken-ait, n. Mineral. An acicular, sub- It tribes, maid." 3. [Local. F.ng.l (li The lapwing. (3) The soft- embraces 4 19 genera, and about 300 species, dis- pearly, white, hvdrous calcium silicate (U^CaSijOt) that shell clam.— oldimaidiiood, n. The condition of be- tribute'kl. /(. [Am. Ind.J Any supernatural object. Com- maid.— old man. 1, Script. Vnregcnerate human nature. of oil; oily. 2. Figuratively, having a sleek appt'arance lilin- MAXITO. ij, [Colloq.] t)ne'8 father, employer, orcommander: usually or smooth o'ko-ulte, O'ku-nait, n. A vulcanized in^nlating mate- with the deOnite article.- old>uian* n. 1. [t.ornwall.] voice or manner; fawning; sanctimonious. LL. oleago {oteagin-)., L. see oil, n.] rial cont^isting of caoutchoac, mineral wax, etc. : u^ed for Mining. Old workings, "i. [Austral.] The gray kangaroo [< < oleum; covering electric conductors. of full growth. 3. Mech. A bent Iron bar, shaped for pass- — o'''le-aj>;'I-nous-ue8S, n. Inff around a projection In a machine or the like, to fonn a o'kra. 6'kru. S. W. Wr. (ok'ro, C.) (xiu), ». [W. Ind. o'ne-a'iiien,0'le-e'men. n. A soft ointment made from rest or purchase for the operation of a bit and brace. HifAMruM or 4. oil. [L.. < oleum; see oil, n.] A herb ( Abel- Bot. Tliesoucheniwood(.ti culti- o"lc-an»'ld, (^O'le-am'id, 7i. Chem. A crystalline com- also, roscmarv i /iojftnarinus offkinattJi} .— olAitntin cac- o'^le-aiu'lde, vated in kitchen-gardens tas* a cylindrical -stemmed Mexican plant {Pilocereux or s pound (CigHssNO) produced by the ac- tion in warm climates, or it» Cereus wtiiliM) with long white hairy growths from Its spiny of alcoholic ammonia on almond- or hazel-oil. [< yoang mucilaginous podi>. tufts. In its native country It Is a column 25 or 30 feet L. oleum (see oil, «.) + amid, amide.] high, but greenhouse is acted in soups, etc. See In cultivation only about as many o"le-an''der, O'lg-an'tler, «. An Old World subtropical ouMBo. o'cbrai; Inches.— Old Man ol' the Mountain, the Supreme Ru- evergreen ornamental shrub {XeHvm Oleander) with ler, or shtikhal-Jehal,of the Eastern Shilte Mohammedan leathery, lance- shaped o'chro^; o'kro*. sect called Isuiaelltes or Assassins. See Assassin. - old* leaves and clusters -ol, -Ol. A., suffix. Chem inan'sibcard, n. Any one of several plants, as Spanish of pink or white flowers. termination denoting: mo«8,the British vlrgin's-bower ( C/mui<»« r««/ft«), U'.S.] Many J*ropt*rly, an alcohol; the fringe-tree iChionanlhusVirainica), or [Prov. Eng.]a varieties have been culti- pheno/, quiui'V. glycer- species of scouring-rush (£i(futoeuol; or the devlL— old*»aidt« a. Anciently said.— a old salt, greatly waned. sweet- < L. oleum^ oil; see veteran sailor.— old Hchool. a school or party advocating The OIL, n.] conserii'atlve prlnclpleH. or abiding by old-fasliloned or anti- scented species is N. odo- ol'a-cad, el'a-cad, n. 3uated doctrines.—old*9Chool, a.— Old Scratch, the rum. Called also rose'bay Any plant of the order evil.— oldiHlffhleduesa, n. Sameas far-sightronkss. and roee'laurel. See Ne- (Aacinex. — old aledtfe* a game of cards, all-fours. See all.— old* ru:m. [< F. oliandre, < Moldier, n. LEnff.] A male salmon after spawning.— Ol'^a-ctn'e-fe, el'a- L. rhoilodendron (see riio- oldiMiuaWf n. A sea-duck (Ciangula hyemaHn) at the DODENDKOS), sin'^t or -cin'e-€, n. northern hemispbere. confused with olea; see Olea.] pt. Bot. An order of The Okrs or Gumbo. The adult male has the polypetalous trees, or central tall-feathers — ©"U'-aM'derdern", , trmnsverve section of the fmit. n. An tTcct frutewent fern rp,.„ frequently climbing much elongated, and Is The /^i„-_j„. (iK?r<«in/ w.«^...., {Oleundrn neriifonniHU a Oleander shrubs the oUcad ismilr — with alternate, entire, ex- blackish and whitish, Oleander). — varied mostly with native of South America. stipulate lesTea, and osoally axillary Inflorescence of reg- <'t^"* flower laid ojten; ft, follicles pesri-gray. Caued also 0'^le>an'drlll i O'le-an'- ^^ ^^ ^^ ^^ **•'''*' '*"" "'^ ^™'*- ular mostly perfect flowers. It embraces 4 tribes, 61 gen- i aoutk*ootUherly, long' Hl^^^^^^^^^^^fl^BT^ o'^le.an'drl ne, \ d r n , era, at>oat dispersed tropics. ^"^ *^^^^ ^w;^ and 275 species, wklely tn the taUed (tuck, old* billy. "^ -tlrin or -drtn. n. Chem. A yellow, verv bitter, poisonous <^lax,f<. (t.g.) [-lanrir, (^i. [Kare.] Lasting aa eon: eonlan. [< The ^^^Drakt '"*law style fashion: *"^ family (£7«ajO«a<'«>ff),esiH'ciallv E. fiortensitf. often called Hcb. 'Atftm. I'tvrnity, < 'aUiin^ bide.] ormer or peclflcally said of type of a style of fi the I8th icild otire. 2. The tnie wild olive {Olea Oleaster). [L., ola-nlH, O'lu-nin, ». Vhetn. An organic compound ob- century and recently revived. Frequeully capitalized. < olea (see Olea) 4- -atiler; see -asteh.J tained by distilling certain animal prodacts, as bone^il. o'le-ate, O'le-et, n. Chem. I . A salt of oleic acid. 2. I< L. oCeum {mv oil.) -\~ atdmai: see amimal, n.] This is 01d*style Type, A mixture of a base, as an oxld or an alkaloid, with oleic »'lny, i^'K-, » pi. [Tain.l Palm-learea for wrlttuK upon 3, Noting a mode of n'ckonlng time: In this sense an ad- acid, made by triturating with a f'tt t'l-iMtlnted stvle: prepared from the palmyra-, the solid substance with the jectival use of the nominal phrase ftlil Style. clri, n. 1, Having lived or existed in a certain o'^le-cra'iion, O'lfi-cre'nen, n. [na, ;V.] A process days: of long standing; as, t>Jng opposed youny, and of — old*timer« n. [Colloq.] 1, One who has resided In a liable to decair; as, elm: abbeys. Hence: elbow-joint. See illus. under elbow. [< Gr. Dkkra- an oM old 0) place or filled a ppsftlon fora longtime. *2, L Archaic] An Having lived berond the middle period of life; having okl fogy.— old ToMif a kind of English gin.— old wife. non, < dleni, ulna. + kranion, skull. 1 — o''le-cra'nal, a. nearly completed the allotted term of years; far advanced See oLDwirs. *Z, A cap or cowl for smoky chimneys. Of or pertalnlug to tiie olecranon. o'^le-cra'nl-nUi in life; aged; as, old folk; an oid be^ar. i.• A babbling old woman. 4. A man having old-womanlsb o^le-crB'noidt. — o"lt'-ern"nnr-lhri'lU, n. Pa- notions.— oio'woaianlsh* a. Suggestive of or like an thol. Inflammation of the elbow -joint.— o"l<»-era"nnr- Aad Imdc* it tnt*. the cammom Pronrb Is. That tb«r« la no k m old woman; aa,oU'toomani«A throc'n*cy, n. J\it/wl. S.3) (xni), a. Producing or yielding oil. [< of America: when written with capltala. properly two words. Houos Autocrat A. 7, p. Vtt. [o. a co. 71.] L. oleum (we oil, /*.) -^/acio, make. "2* Itelonging to the ancient world, or lo a prehistoric period; — oleflant iras, ethylene: formerly so called because (2) Exhibiting discretion and judgment or deportnieul old-fashioned; antique, of the oily compound it forms with cblorin. like an (4dairaexp«ienced persoo; thooghtful; mature. old'en, Old'n, p. I./. Torenderold. II. i. Tobave o'le-fln, O'lg-fln, n. Chem. Any one of a group of hy- Bono mn old la basrt at fortr. wamo ar« jtmmm a* rifdlr. the appearance or characteristics of old age; ^row old. drocarbons having the formula Cnllan: homologous with CBABUli Kbam CUMafrand Utarih ekTtf, p.M. [c. * w.] Bh« had oldened la diat lime a« people do who ntffer nl^ntlT ethylene. [< olefiant.) o'lo-Hne^. (8) In a modified sense, liaving some apeciflcd age: in ffr^at mmul pain. Thackkkay Emmond bk. i. eh. 9. p. M. [L.J o-le'lc, o-II'ic, A. (O'l^ic, C. W. !»>.) (xiii), a. Chem. this sense usually after the noon exprcaauig time or age; ancient: chiefly poetical. old'en, a. Old; Of, pertaining to, or derived tmm oil. [< L. oleum; see as, a child two months und (Cj^ been One dwvOrtli made, used, or known for a long time; associated who by the cMtied Rhine. HmO»> contained In most mixed oils and fats, from which LoVOVXLLOW Flowera rt. 1. with scmie ptwkms period: imposed to new^ft*sh^ recent. It isoutalned by aaponltlcation with an alkali, eluic aeldt. Synonyms: see axcisnt. or modern. (1) Beloagiiig to an early or remote perlou o^le-Ifer-OHn, 0*li,*-if\*r-U8, a. Aflfording or pnxlucing old'f*r-moMl. Ald'sr-mAst, a. [Colloq.. Western U. 8.] of history or development ; ancient; antique; early; as, oil. I^. (see l>ear.] Oldest; as. where Is your olftemto%t child ? [< oleum oil, n.) -j-fero, the f)l/l (rri*eks; o/// coins, paintlnga, or moonments. old^iflaala'loned, Old'-fash'uiid, a. 1. Having the o'le-lii, O'if-in, /i. Chem. A colorless oily liquid com- VUttr thtto tlM> Vedu; . . . otder thaa tko • iof HoBMn . style, characteristics, or customs of former times; anti- Eound (C67Uio<0«), the chief constituent of fatty oils. quated; old-time; as, an old'faahUmed garden. < L. olram: sec oil, w.] el-a'liit; trl"n- combining form.— o'le-o-graph, t. fomier of two or the earliest of several things; as. Old n. A chromolitho- doct. DlCKKirs Dombeg and Son eh. 14. p. 233. [a. a l. 'H6.J or KeU Sandstone; Old Hl^ German; oM'SChooI theology. graph Imitating giving the effect of an oll-palntlng. — old^ifaah'toned-nesiit n. The state or quality of i. The pattern assumed by a drop of oil placed on water.— (4) In i. .\n lns»trum('nt of the hydrometer longtime; known or uited long; familiar; customary: used at in England: so old'hanit, n. Wonted made Oldham, typ<* for dctcniiliilriK the density ()f oUs.— ik'it^-oioil'^, n. ofu-n as an eolthst of kindness or friendship; as, an old called in the 14tti and 15th centuries. »'e oil.— o^'Ir-o-plioH-plior'le, a. Chem. Of. per- friendship: old habits or fuilts; an old saying or tone; an oId'h«m-lte, Old'am-ait, n. Mineral. A pale phe«t- taining to, or contaliifrigH mixture of (deln and phosphorus. old comraae. (8) Having had long experience or prac- nut-brown, transparent calcium sulfld (CaS), crystallizing — oleophoHplioric nclit, a gummy yellow compound tise- hence, craftr: cunning; as, an old offender. 3. in the isometric svstem. [ < Dr. Oldham, director of the In various parts of ihr animal liody and In the flesh of cer- tain flsh.— ». Chem. [Colloq.] Great; Dig: ased as an Intenalve. osoally after Indian Geolo&rical Survey.] o"le-op'l*. I. A native c: AXf'iEXT:OBsoLKTX: pbhikval. soon keeping, -i, .\ nharmaceutleal preparation consist- omponnds. etc.: — of old. 1. Of ancient tlmt^; an, old'oter, Old'st^, n. 1 . [Colloq.] A person of aavanced ing of a ttxed or volatile oil coiiialnlng a resin and some- hdly iinii i,f nl'l. 'Z, .\ lonjc lime: an, I liave known blrti of years; an old or elderly man. times other active niattd.— oldM-lolhes one who hiivn aim old maa« wlb Wm. MoRRlfl Neum/rom Nntehere ch. 9, p. 7&. [R. BROS. '00.) slcinii, 4»f cnheh, of lupulln, of pepper, and of ginger.— clothfii.-Old llriver. the devil.— old fcphralm [Lo- o^Ie-o-ren'iii-ouH, '/.— o"l«*-o-Mni"'<*lin-rum, n. A ral. V. s,!, the tfrlraly n. %. [^Kng.1 \itut. A masters mate; a midshipman who Nfsr.— old«ewf, (Local, KnK. 1 pharmacenlleal pn-pamtlnn made by trinimting ;«t grains A lahrulr] nHii. till- Itnllitn-umnfu-.— oldffared* a. Old In has w?en lour years In service. of sugar with a drop of a volatile oil" until a titu' pctwder is lookn or aiip*-»nii>' old fdirylfih, n. Of, pertaining old'wlfe, Old'waif, n. 1. The old-M|uaw duck. 2. obtained. The powder may then be dlKsolved In water or t<». or like an old : ly coDsen'atlve.— aldifs- One of variouc flshes. (I) The (

». Th<-rtii . > >r wsjri of an old fogy; re- rrylum, / 0'kM)-mnr'g(i-rin (xiii).n. Ar- rt/s). (3) Thealewife. (3) Theiiienbadeu. (4 1 The toothed o^Ie-o-mar'yfa-rln, urtann* lo ahandnr. . : . '>r cintonif.— oldfffeatlr- herring'. flieflsh (//a/ij>/«-'(i. («) The black sea-bream o^le-o-mar'Ka-rtne, tiflcial butter, originally made aianlr* '' r- -ole. ntifflx. Chem. 8ame as -ol. together, wilh a coloring-matter: formerly distinguished

a« = out; ell; 10 = f«iMl. gQ = future; e =: k; cburcli; dli = £Ae; ffo, sins, i^lK; so; tliin; sh = arare; F. boik, dttne.

oleon 1336 OIneya

". Mineral. A olive-shell. 8. A?iaf. The olivary body. 9. [Local, from hutterin^ a« containing no lard, but now the same ao-chro-inie'ini-at.-ol'i-sro-cln»e, usually niflsslve, brittle, vitreous, whitish, transparent to Eng.] The oyster-catcher. [F., < L. oliva, < Gr. elaia, ingredieote are used in both. Olwtnargarin \» the name gublranshiceut soda-linie feldspar. frvstalllzfnK in the trl- olive-tree.] United States government recognizea the — by which the clinic system. See fkldspab. ol^i-ifo-cop'ri-a, n. — American olive. 1. A small tree (Wca -^»nCT-/ca- siie'liit. constl- product, but'ter-liit; o'le-oj; IMthol. Scantiness of evacuations from tlie liowels; nti or Omtinnth us ATiierica7iu8) of the South Atlantic coast The vtocvm for the manufacturf of oIeoiuartfarin-biitt«fr as i>atlon.-ol"i-KO-cy«'tlc,«. Having few cyst^.— ol/'i- of the United States, with hard tlne-gralned wood. Called diminu- wtentented in France by M. Hippolyte Meg« and suUequt-ntly intro- ir«-ty-ihe'nir-a, «. PiUhol. A deficiency or &\6o devilwood. ^. [Humorous.] The cotton-plant, iK'cause in taking ihe piin^st frvsh beef corpuscles of the blood. ol"i-8:o-cy- Seedid into1 thk ooantrj- oonusta tion of the red salad-oil is made from Its seeds.— baHtord o., the Tasnia- m ith ice-cold water, aft«r to \Try «•»., madai cmrefuU/ washliMr th« sam« ihw'iiii-aj.— ol"i-«:o-dy-nani'ic, «. Uue nlan Ironwood {Notelijea HyuHrina) and the Norfolk Island maohiiier.r. It i-^ then placed in wU&ii^ it u cut asmie aa pcNsible by small forces. or IJotany Bay ironwood (N. longifolia), both of the olive or 130^ K. anil stirred btn* vata of water heated br steam to VSt" By oligodynamic phenomena Naeeli means those produced bv family {ytoiceae).— Bohemian o., the oleaster (Elie-'ig- of the fat cells from the fltirievenU hour* to BSMrateUie membrane exceedintfly small quantitietn of metallic subBtaiices in solution. Oi- the mountain. laurel while kept warm for nuH ajiqustifolia). — VnWi'orwXn. o,, melted fal. After which it is allowed to rest igiHlynamic poisoning nuinifesttt itself in the living cell iiiadiffei-- Called also Valif'jmia naxna- settle aiid i Unibellularia Otlifornira). two boon, daring which the fine particles of membrane from true chemical poisouinti. In the former cai*e the cell allowed enl way //f/j*.- fragrant or Hweetsscenled o,, an ornamental the bt floats as an oil. It isdrawnoff into asecond vat and rigriJity. yaturf Aug. 3, '1*3, p. 331. does not at once lose its (Jleti frugranx) from China and Ja- demembranised fot. Portions of this mass, about shrub (OfiiuDithus or to eoUdify. It is — n. Pathol. Deficiency in the are wrapped in clean cloths, piled on each ol"i-BO-Ka-lac'li-a. pan, with small white flower's said to be used by the Chinese thrae pounds in weivht. ol"i-«;o-u:lo('liHiii, n. LKare.] to pressure. The expressed oleomar^nn is secretion of milk.— toflavor tea.— hollysleavedo.,a hardy evergreen shrub oikcr, and subjected ol"i-B«-iiia'iii-a, n. Mi- then ehomed with water or milk, salted, and sometimes slightly Meager linKulstic knowledge.— {(MmanthuH ilicifolhix) from Japan.— mock o., same as " " alienation iu which comparative- R. OODKN DORmrs Utter to Standarfi Diet. Feb. -T thol. A variety of mental B-vsTARD OLIVE.— ol'ivesbranch", v. 1. A branch of are affected.- ol^i-KOin'er-oiis, oleo- ly few of the faculties the olive-tree, as an emblem of peace: from the ollve-leaf It may be safely satd that all oleomargarine is nia*l<' from a. Consisting of or having few members or segments.— brought back to Noah by the dove. ii. pi. [Humorous.] oi!, neutral lard, milk and cream, and pure butter, although pure ol"i-tfo-iiie-to'ehi-a, ". Avoidance of participial allusion to Ps. cxxvlil, 4 (Prayer- is not used in aU grades. Oleo-oil is made from the selected Offspring; cblldrim: an batter constructions; opposiKl to poli/metochitt. — ol^^i~«0'inV' tmt of the steer, and neutral lard U made from the leaf lard of the hook version). — o.sbrown. o.tffmy* o.=Kreen, o.* OI''i-a:o-iiiy-o'die, ". pL Omith. A sub- UMae fats, therefore, are the very line.-it obtainable, and after to'chic, «.— yellow, sec seKCTRUM.— o.sniit. ". The nut=Uke stone bov; passerine birds having the lower tkesBimal heat is removed they are placed in a (with of cold water, division of mesomyodan of the drupe of an East-Indian and Malaysian tree (Klso- after being the trachea not modified and the syrinx with few tk^wa^Md and the tibrine and tissue removed, then end of citi-puH Ganitrux) of the linden family ( 'fiUacesE), used for and tyrant-fly- ndlMcd to liquid form they are churned with milk and cream and slnglug-nmscles, including ant-thrushes ni'cklaces, rosaries, etc.- o.=oil, 7i. Oil expressed from con- eoiorins-matter. such &» is uaed in coloring pure butter, and a catchers. OI"i-KO-my-o'diJ.— oI"'i-(fO-iny-o'dan, the ripe fruit of tlu' olive: used as butter In coimtrles where iderable percentage of the very finest pure butter is also added, the ol"i-KO-my-o'di-an, «. & ».— ol"i-go-niv'oid, the olive-tree flourishes, but in other parts of the civilized the butterine and flavor qnantity of bolter depending upon gradeof ol"i-a:o-iiiy-oi'de-au, «.— ol^i-go-ner'al-oHn. world chiefly In salad-dressings. It Is employed also for packed the sameaa OMired; aJfter churning, the goods are worked and a. Hot. Having few petals.- ol'^i -ifo -phyl'lonN, «. medicinal purposes and in manufactures. Called also batter. Co. Letter to Standard Diet. Apr. 10. '91. Petrol. par* ARMOUR & Itot. Few-leaved.— or'i-ffo-uhyr'ic, a. Con- «?t'ec(-oiV.— o.*plain, n. A tree of the genus Elseodendron, taining distinct crystals of oligoelase. — oI"i-KO-p8y'- 1 < OLEO- MAROARIN.] of the staff-tree family ( Celaxtracese), or Its fleshy drupe.— -f- Imbecility; weak-mindedness. o'le-oii, O'Ig-on, n. Chem. An oily liquid from distilla- chi-a, 71. Pathol. Mental o.^sliell, n. An ollvold gastropod.— o.styrant, 7i. An — a. Fcw-sepaled.— ol"i-sro- tion of oleic acid with lime: regarded as the ketone of ol"i-go-8ep'al-oUH, elainllne t>Tant-flycatcher.— _ , sld'rr-ite, n. A ston^* meteorite containing a small per- n. 1, The ban! oleic acid. [< L. oleum; see oil, «.] o'le-oiiej. o.iwood, centage of Iron.— ol"i-go-»per'iiil-n, n. Pathol. A wood of the olive: used in or o'le-ouii, O'lg-Ds, a. Oily. [< L. oteosus, < oleum; see «. Bot. Fev,' paucitv of S(^nien.— ol^'i-go-titper'tnouHt nainental work. "Z* Any tree OIL, n.] o'le-osej.— o'^e-os'I-tyt, i>. seeded. --01"i-a:o-»po're-a, «. »/. Protoz. An order of the genus Elseodendron, of ol^er-a'ceoiis, el\'r-e'shiu8, a. Of tne nature or quality of coccidiidean sporozoans with the content of the cyst the staff-tree fandly {Ceiax- spores, as in Coccittiitlse.— oV^i'gO' of herbs used in cooking; fit for use in cookery. [< L. developing into a few tracese), or Its wood; espe- '/.- ol"i -jco - spo'rous, a.— ol"i-go- oieraceuti., < olus ioler-\ greens.] Hpo're-nn, cially, E. integrifolia and E. ri. Hot. Same as oi.KiANDRois.— ol'i- n. The cul- steiii'o-noiiM. auHtrale of New South Wales: ol'er-l-cu ""lure, el'fir-i-curchur or -tHJr,,, . ., lfo-Myr'lii-bl((>,?^ IRare.l A word of fewer than four L. used by cabinet -makers.— tivation of esculent plants, especially pot-herbs. [< syllables: distinguished from polyKullfthle.— ol''i-«o-Hyl- ol'lve-wort",/'. Anyplant xik. iiia<-k (>iive-sliclU/j/iya olug {oler-), pot-herb, -}- culture.] lab'ic, a.-ol"i-Kot'o-koU8,«. Or/iith. Laying fewer of the olive family (O/pac^aB). Pathol. Defective maura) Va — ol^er-l-cul'tur-al-ly, adv. than five eggs.— ol"i-H:ot'ro-pliy,«. — o.syard, 7i. An enclosed olf, elf. n. [Prov. Kng.l The bullfinch. nutrition; lack of nourishment, ol^i-sro-tro'phi-at. olive-orchard.- wild o. 1. The oleaster (O. Europsea L.o?/ac«o, Pathol. oUfacl'.-, Di-imel-fact',I , n.r(. [Humorous.]iiiu..ii-i»..D.j To,«o...v....smell. [<,^^.«y..v.-, ©vl"l-a:u-re'sl-a,el'i-giu-rt'8i-aor-gru-re'si-a,«. or OleaHter), the parent of the cultivated olive, spiny and freq. ofot/fi'-io, < oleo, smell, -f- fucio, make.l — ol-fac'- Morbidly deficient gecretion of urine. [< olig- + Gr. yielding smaller and worthless fruit; also, O.dioica of India. It. The act, sense, or process of smelling; scent. *2. of various other trees orshrubs supposed to re- tion* onrwi urine 1 oI"l-eu'rI-at, Any one iriBlriunent the true oleaster ( Else- ol^rac-toni'e-ter, ol-fac-tem'g-tvr, n. An j,.|j„/da, o-lin'da, n. [Hraz.^ A huntlng-knife made at semble the olive in some respect, as for measuring the keenness of the sense of emell. [< L. oiinda, Brazil. agimft avgnxtifolia) and the Venetian sumac: sometimes so called in Europe. offario (see olfact) -f- Gr. rnetron, measure.] o'llo, O'liO, n. 1. A miscellaneous collection, especially — ol'ived, a. Adorned with olives or olive-branches. ol-fac'to-ry, el-fac'to-ri, a. Of or pertaining to the of musical pieces or numbers: a medley, itt. Same as o-llv'l-forin,a. Resembling an olive in form; oval. sense of smell; connected with olfaction. oli-a, 3. [< L. oUa, pot.l o'syllot, — ©I'iv-bac", «. The olive-backed thrush has recently been stated in France, that ... if the olfactory ol'i-phantT. 1. An ornamented hunting-horn of Ivory. ol'tve-baok", It America. DMTet of a puppy are destroyed, it never sacks. (TiJ7-di.i8 swain-soni) of North — ol'ive- "73.] Darwin Emotions ch. 1, p. 47. [a. backed'' , a. Having the back olivaceous. [< L. ol/aciorium, smelling-bottle, < olfacio; see ol- oFlv-en-Ite, ©I'iv-en-ait, /. (el'i-ve-noit, C. Wr.; o-liv'- PACT.J ol-fae'tlv(et. yn-oit, W.\ n. Mineral. A brittle, adamantine, vari- — olfaclory bulb, a club-shaped extension of the hem- ously colored, but commonly green, subtransparent hy- ispheres of the brain, from which arise the special nerve- drous copper arsenate. (HCuaAsO^), crystallizing in the fllaments that supply the organs of smell.— o. nerve, the orthorhombic system. [< (J. oltretierz, < olive, olive first of the cranial nerves; tlie collected filaments given off -^ erz, ore.] ol'lve=ore^t. from the olfactory bulb; Inaccurately, the combined bulb (< L. oliva; see olive), ^ Ollphant^ of the 15th Century. and tract. See Illus under crus. ,„ _ ol'l-ver*, ol'l-vgr, ?;. In metal -working,___ a small prim- of ELjiPHANT.} ol'i-fautt. having ol-fa<*'lo-rj', n. [-kies, />/.] [Colloq.] The organ of *J. An elephant. [Form ^ itive form of trip-hammer worked by the foot, a liude boisterous merriment. 2, smell: commonly in the plural, ol-fac'torj [Rare], ol'l-prancet,. « 1. head at one end of an arm borne on a horizontal shaft: Pride; vamiy,vanity. also .f.l'^*'' treadle brought down to the work by o-llb'a-iiuin, o-lib'a-uum, n. See oum. Called ,„,,,„„ „ ri t i «amp a« iiwY.iff raised by a and the, " ^ ^^ spring or by its own weight.*" Oliver, proper name.1 OrUuUil jniukincense. [LL., < Ar. al'lumi. < «/, p'^rs^' ^'oAu-Hat'ruS a [ < r*. [Prov. Kng.] A young eel. -f- /«M/(, frankincense.] ol'l-bant. ol'l-to-rv,el'i-to-ri. [Archaic] I. a. Belonging to or ol'l-ver", ollvc-grove or olive-tree, nl'i-veret. ori-beiie,el'i-b?n, n. Chem. A colorless liquid com- producing kitchen vegetables. II. w. 1. A pot-herb ol'i-vei-^t,". An Or'l-ve'ri-an,el"i-vI'ri-an Cromwel lan. pound ((\oH,«) contained inthevolatile oil of olibaimm, ^r simila? vegetable common to kitchen-gardens. 2. A « A 7i. imitation pearl made for traffic of which It is a terpene. vegetable-garden. [< L. oliionus, < otvs, greens.] ol'I-vet, el'i-vet, An olive.] ol'id+,«. Ofa8trong,dlsagreeable8mell;fetld. ol'l-doust. „i/|y -ness Olive etc Phil. Soc. with savages. [< 72. Same as olipuant. ©Pi-vet-an, n. Ch. Hist. A member of a ol'i-fauntt, « ll'va. o lai'va or -li'va n 1 C^wh (1) To-li'va* Ol'1-vet-an, as OLIGO-. olltf-. Same . * Benedictine order of monks founded in Siena in 1313, _ « . „ ^i xn oiivp-shpll (Q^ fo l' A penns tv meal of OHri- "" """ ol"l-ffan'drow8, ©I'i-gan'dros, a. Bol. Havmg few P^-^ -^^ ^,^^^^^^^2} A' ^ body. [L.; sometimes called the order of Mount Olivet. olio- Gr. anir l.} AtiaL The olivary stanK'us, or less than twenty. [< -f O-IIv'I-dfe, o-liv'i-dt or -d6, n. jtl. Corich. A family .?ee*>»'iVE.]Ot^»i >./lji.» C.J iamir-U man.] of rachigiossate gastropixls having a proiK>dium separated 01"I-va'«e-a, el-i-ve'se-Q or -va'ce-a, n. pi. Conch. ol'^^i-KaM'thous, ©I'i-gan'thos,« n nnl Havine"*"''«"'''^few the mesopodium ana a subcylindrical Oi.ivA.l-oKl-va'ce-an, o. ». by a fissure from -{- VheiMMm. [< & flowers. I < OLIG- Gr. anthos^» floweVl shell with short spire, narrow aperture, and ol"!- va'ceous, el-i-ve'sluus, a Olive-green. polished a ol'I-garcn, ©I'i-gQrc, n. Amember.,,nber of or„. a„.„.^.ruler in an oi- plicate columella; olive-shells. Oliva.]— ol'i-vld.n. ol"i.vn'dert,a, Du l.grccn... ol"l.vas'tert. ... [< igarchy. [e«n three parties in Athens; the aria- ^|/|yj» eViv a. 1. Of or l)ertaining to the olive. 2. and FEKiDOT. < olive.] tocratlc.theJemoimiii-, anJthe.j((!/art*ic. f __ __ Having tile color of the uuripe ollve Or of the foliage of — ol'iv-ln:di"a-base, «. Petrol. A diabase com- Keiuhtlev Grrn-e |it. ii. ch. 9, p. aB. [H. a. « 00. '3».] the olive-tree; of a dull greenish yellow. posed essentially of plagloelase. augite, and olivln.— o.s oI''l-aar'<'liai;; or'l-gar'clilc-al}. yabbro, n. A gabbro containing olivin, often changed. A man of slight, elegant, active fignre, and of clear, colorless, — ». variety of norlte characterized by the aI'I-Kar"<'lili«t, el'i-gar'kist, n. One who favors or olive complexion. WlNTllBOP Cecil Dreeme ch. 5, p. 72. [t. & F.] o.rts an oligarchy. presence of olivln.— o.^rnck, n. Sanu' as pebidotite. 7). Olive color or quality. ive-ueKS,,— -. 1. •1, Of, pertaining to. or characterized oI'l-|tar"fhy,el'i-gar'ki, «. [-chies, p^.] Government ,„ ^ ,,,, -^ ^ — ol"Iv-ln'le,a. "'"'^'"' ^ ^"'^^^ ""h the presence of.olivh, (cl.rysolite). oI"Iv-In-It'lcJ. by the. few; -a form of goverAment in which supreme "\^^^^^','^ by iVave" ol'iv-in-ite, ft. Mineral. Same as olivknitk. power is restricted to a few persons or families; also, tW small whitish flow- ol'lv-f ii-old, el'iv-in-©id, n. Mineral. An olivin-like members of such ruling class taken together. ers, and a bluish- subsUmce found in meteorites. [< olivin -^- -oid.] The monarchy was changed into an idigarchy by a process some- black oily fruit con- ol'lv-lte, ©I'iv-alt, t). Chem. A bitter crystalline com- iriut tike that which may lie traced at Athens, annual magistrates taining a bony two- olives in olive-leaves. ^TjiMOBW) l)eing Bubatitiited for monarcbs, but the magiBtracy be- J)ound found in unripe and nif confinefl u> the ruyal family. celled stone. The 'Iv-old, ©I'iv-eid, a. Of or pertainhig to the Olividse. »• '76-] conunon cultivated Rawuss. Pafhol. Defi- prlzi.III mcaWm-tlwoT ing- [s of :ito5 sporangia, tlie latter said to be the bitt*!me8s, and afterward bottled in an aromatized provided with a ring conslHtlng of a single row of cells.— Once they chanced upon a night of olla inidrida, with such ap- brine. 3, A tree of some other species of the same ^e- boyish ammtion to taste the dish ofl-iro-car'poUH, a. Kew«frnlted. -~ Ol'l-go-cene, peals to March's memory of a nu8, or any one of various trees of other genera, havnig tliat poetic then pensive over its cahba^ and car- a. & n. Oeol. S«;e Tkbtiary.— OI"i-aro-chpp'ia, n. pi. he became and Belmlnth. An order of hennaphroditic

rttle; bot, bom; alale; fofa, firm, gak; at, fire, f^ccord; elgmfint, $r = ov«r, 6ight, | = usoge; tin, machine, % = r«uew; obey, no; not, nor, atgm; full, . . +

olograph 19d7 omnibus ol'o-eraph, ol'^o-gnipli'lc.elc. See holograph, o-inan'der»wood'', o-man dgr-wud", n. A species of Cey- 2. The act of neglecting; failure or neglect to do some- etc the correct forms lonese eboriv {Dinnpyron Ebenum). thing that one has power to do, or that it is one's duty to o-man'i-dt -dg, fara- -oloey, sujix. A suffix uwkI in Enelish worde derived O-niaii'l-dae, or n. pi. Araeh. A do; pretermission. of spiders with calamistrnm and cribellum and eix from the Greek, denoting (!) h scit-nce, as thvofoQy. gewn in Thing 62. [j. P. '90.] oay, phUoiogu: (2) (rarefv) a collection, m nnthoioeak; o-mfs'slv(C ' amontr all Mongol tribe*. W. W. RocKHlLL Land of the Lamas ^ ' L. -otogia, Gr. -oloffia, < Itgr*, gather. 1 mitting; remiss.— o-nils'8lv(e-ly, adv. (2) < < ch. 4. p. 176, note. [C. CO. 'VI.] " ,^.- *, . r / , t ^ m * Ji ol'o-irr* elo-jl. M. L-oiKS, p/.] IHumorous.) A science the - o-mlt', o-mit', ^y. [o-mit'ted; o-mit'ting.] 1. To fall om^ar-thrl'tlf*, em'ar-thrtii'tisor -thrt'tis, n. Pathol. name of which t^it^U lit -oiogg: hence, any branch of to include, insert, or mention; leave out; pass over; over- learning or science; as, he Icnows all the ologifJt. Inflammaiion of the shoiiider-joint. [< Gr. djnos, look; drop; as, to omit an important fact. ol*»-plio'iii-a»el'o-fo'ni-a, n. Defective speech from con- shoulder. + arthritis.] Kenltal malformation of the vocal organs. [< Gr. oUymi^ om'^ar-throc'a-cy, em'flr-throc'a-Bi, n. Pathol. \J\- That which constitutes History, properly so called, is in great 3e«troy,+pArt»?. voice.] part omitted from works on the subject. . . ceration of the shoulder-joint. [< Gr. 5ff«w, shoulder, ,„ ^ ^ ., Education 67. '89.] O-lo-rO'flO, n variety of sherry Spencer ch. 1. p. [a. o'ao-ro'so, [8p.] A _|_ ar^A,w». joint, -j- Ay;Aw, bad.] of Jerez, bpain. See wine, 2. To leave, pass by, or neglect; fail or forbear to do made m the neighborhood o-ma'sum. o-me'som or -mg'sum. n. [sa, jU.] The or to use; leave unperformed; as, to omit no eflEort to The olomaoa ... are deeper in coW thao the amontiIl»do«, manvplies or third stomach of a ruminant. [L.. paunch.] have a natty Oavoor, and are fuller, richer, and mellower to the _ o-itia'K«l a achieve success. [< L. omitto; see omission.] bouquet. ..' taste, beaidM poMeacinx an especiatlr frmffrant *^ __ # j /^ «. / j* n. Same as Ommiad. -o-iiilt'taiic*e, n. Omission.— o-ntlt'ter, n. H. VizeTELiTf^5aAo«nA«-rycE:6.p.«. [w.L.*co.'7«.] 0-nia>'yad, - Om-may'yad^^ «"»'ber, ©in'bt;r, n. A gam; olp, elp. n. The bullfinch [Var.of^ ALP^n.] olft: olpht. - . . .7 _ j^ origmaiiv Si>anigh, much ol'pe, ol'pt or ol'pe, /*. Or. A/itiq leathern oil usually by three persons. tiask U8e•,.. j , , em'^ront,*?. [F.] Distinguished by Indetlnitely with arms free and denticulated suckers, but no claws. handle, used for dipping wine. om'brant, [< outlined shadows or shadlnga: said of certain ceramic Om-mas'treph-es, n. (t. g.) [< Gr. o/zima, eye, (ir. olp?, vase, leathern oil-flask.] work, as porcelain lamp-shades. strepho, turn.] Oni'^ina-to-Ktrepli'l-diet. — oin- ol-uid'i-um, /<. Bot. Ol-pld'l-uui, om'^br^', ©m'bre', ». AcheapgradeofsUk prints. [F., ma-Ntrepli'ld, ».— oni-niaM^trepli-oid, a. of chytrioiaceous fungi des- A genus shaded, < L. wmfrra, shade.] om''ma-te'uni,em'a-t!'um(W-te'um, n. [-te'a,;)^.] A of true titute mycelium, and repro- om'bril* «. Same as vjibkil. vmbrkl. comixjiiiid eve, as in arthropods. [< Gr. Ofnma(t-)^ eye.] zofMpo'res within ducing by producwl om'bro-graph, om'bro-grgf. n. An automatic instni- — oni^'nia-tp'al, a. Koosporangia, or in thick-walk'ii rest- ment for recording the lime of <>ccurn*nce. quantity, and oni''nKa-tId'l-uiii, em"a-tid'i-um, h. ing-sp«)ret*: parasitic on alga>. fungi, rapidity of rainfair [<(;r.om*;w. niin-storm.+ *uRAPH.] one of the simple elements of a com- and higher plants. [< Gr. oi/fi((i-)g^ oin*broni'e-ter, em-brom'e-tsr, n. A rain-gage. [< pound eye, as in arthropmls. [< Gr. h-Hthern oil-fUuk.] (ir. otubro^. rain-storm, -f- inetroit, measure.] ommafU'tion, dim. at omma{t-), eye.] «''lu-iiai'ruM, n. Bwne as olisat- oin^diiT'diK^. em'-dlK-^Iir. n. The madoqua. Seet,tv Illus.ii.uo. — om'^nia-tld'l-al,uin-'iiiH-iia'i-ai, a. under MAOotiUA. oni'*dlK*dik'^U , om-niat'o-ptiore, em-mat'o-fOr, 7t. «'ly-ko«k'^. A'lfkOk*. n. A Dutch ('.^ , ^, o-me'fEA. o-ml'ga, U ., or O'ra^-a, S. (o-meg ^' eve-stalk, snail. cake made like a cruller, but richer and ^f 1 -^^ iis of a [< Gr. otn- A'.Xxiii), /(. The twenty -fourth and last letli tenderer. "»«^^-*' ^y^' p/>erd, bear.] seventh vowel in the Greek alphabet (O, «): equivalent; .flf^nt + ItalU of •wecrlcfwd dough, fried in lion's — oni "ma-lopli'o-rous a U) ll^ratively, theend; the last. fmt. and csUed dtMHrhnata, or ofMtorJbi. Engli«h long o: Having stalked ey^, as land-pulmo- IRVIMO Knickerbocker bk. ui, ch. ; I aro Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the ending, saith the *• P- An OIpe of thi nates. 170. lo. p P. •«0.I *'''''':* „ceniunrB.C.4/*/tv- The Inter-

all- century B. C— 0-lyni"pi-ad'lc* «. then add the milk, the miU, pepper, and Dour if any is o comprehendw or constitutes all; O-lytn'pl-aii, o rinrpi-an, a. 1. Pertaining to the ta«tly the white* beaten to • stiff froth. ness: appliitl by some to the Deity. tweKe great gfxls of Olympus, e«(ieci«lly to Zeus. Buckeye Cookery, To Make Omelets p. IM. [B. P. C. "W.] Sonothinffltecamesomethinir.and ontne>fy informed nullity into an esftence. T. Brownk The OlgmtMan religkici of Homer wm national, political, theaa- { < F. omelette, for aiumelle, shin's plating, < L. lamella, Reltgio Medict pt. i, 1 .t5, \t. 55. [w. s. '8«.] tltropic. mnd Ot hlgUr arientifte cooatmclion, alt tbe parts of it thin plate.] ont'e-lette^ [F.J; oin'lett. •tanding in doe onlerljr relation to one another. all.l aad o'men, O'men. r. I. /. To foreshow as or to foretell [< L- omnt^, oiii-nre-tvt. (iUAD«o« in Sorik Americ^in Ker*«r Feb., "W^ ». p ^ ^„ ^^^„. p,^.„age; forebode;'bode: as, to omen misfortune,misfortune. omnl-. Derived from Latin otnnh, all: a combining form. [For other words AnOmmatidium. ^ Snr^l,' ^onld my avenginga sword fulfil WTxateVr he omened. ^*iVl^'« "-S y/.'^^Vn'^Jf'*"^??!;*!Any one of the higheri^'r^".Vi?'.rf*;h.g.Kls of the 7 « witli O-lym'pl-an. soithey itod«-/cjt can. «. 1. 1«0. beginning omni-, see vocabularj' el, cuticular cor- ancient tin-ek mythology who dwelt ^eua on Mt, om"nl-arl'l*(*', a. [Hare.] neaflens;A(/. hypo- w^ „^ ^ to aer^e a« an omen; augur, om^-natef flace.]— Olvrnpus. The twelve werc^Zeuj^^^Hwa. 'nlversally active or orfKlniitiug all ac- dermal cells of cor- *>ly"'P'a"« ^„^„^ „ An occurrence, phenomenon, or incident re. Atlietia, Apollo, Artemis, ileniies. .\re»."^ Aphrodite, He- tion.— nm'ni-arch, «. The chief or n«>l K-ns; r. reti- " earded as an indication of a favorable or unfavorable nophora: nr.nucle- phwstn!*, ruler of all.— om^ui-cor-p»'i*e-nl, Heatia, Poseidon, and Demeter. Sec Kronoa. "f retinophora; uaue; a prophetic sign; prognostic; as, an evil omen. rt. Illare.l ComprehendliiK the sub- »" O-l ytn'pi-an-lain, o-lim'pt-he- er*uint, n. Amlwellant'ous cullectlon; an ornnlum-Kath- wjut r.ir-i.niiid every funf y«ars at Olympta in nonor of patic omentum l»y whieh the greater and leaser cavities of all ennn.— oni -iiitf^p- noUH. «. iliare. | Composed of OlyinpUn /.iiw.1- Tf». vi.r..r'.. t.H... »u an olive.uu n wreathwn^atii Ttie vieior's prize was an thetj,e peritoneumDerltoneum conimunlcate. kinds.— om'ni-ffraph. n. lltare.l A pantograph.— O-ly ni'pli-M, /*. fd. The Olympic game». o-meii'luni. omen'tum. n. [-TA, pi.] A free fold of oiii*nll ^e-Kcnl« ". Reading everything. — oiii^'^nl* 0-l>'fn"pl-«ii'lr, i>-lim'pi-«n'ic. An ixic in praise the pt-ritoneiim passing Iwtween cer- neM'cence, «. Ignorance of all things.— nm-nip'a* ' of a victiir ill the rti<*«, tain of the viscera, as from the stom- rent, w. [Uare.l A parent of all.— oni'^'ni-pn'ri-entf a. liiarc.l Bringing forth all things.— oiii"nl-pnr'i-ty» < Gr. /WyiH/nowU'M, victor at Olympic games, < Oiym- ach to the liver, splei'ii. and colon. n. Equality of all: universal equality. — 0111 - nip'a- pin, oivmpia, -»- uik^, victorv,] The vaslrohcpatlc or Hmall roUH* ft- Producing or t>earlng all things. — oiii'^iii* o-lim'pus, of the paases from the leseeri'urv- 0-l)rfn'pu», n. Or. Myth. The home •ncntam Patient enduring all things; having the liver: pa'tlenti a. In or g'Hifi. Unrated by the earlier |MH-tM on. tbe summit of ature of the stomach to tlie omrniuni, from unlimited endurance.- oiii"nl-pci*-cip'i-ence, 7i. Per- Mt. I Hyiupus, In Theasaly, and latcT in the sky. [L., < ftatr••^lenie ception of all things; unlimited perception. le cardiac end of ttie stomaeti to the tir. fMymiKfi.] spleen; the iraNlrocolic or great Coleridge . . . came into the room, . . . Redding a light around O-lyn'tbt-ae. 0-Iin'thi-ac. I. a. Of or pertaining to onienlum. ironi the lower InirdtT of him of povtic efTiilirence and ontnipercipience. Charlrs and the ancient city of Olynthoa, in the peuinaula of C'hal- the Htoniarh to the irancverMi* colon. Mary C. CI-akkb ReroUectiouit 0/ iVrilertt ch. 5. p. M. [n.\ cidice. O-lyn'thl-ant. II. n. One of tbe three lying In front of ttie Inlesilnes like an oni^nl-per-cip'i-en-cyt, oin"ni-ppr-clp'l-eul. orations of I>eniOHthenes in behalf of Olynthus. apron. Ste illus. under pebitoneum. Pereefvliig Jill things.— fiiii ni-i>rev'a-lenl, a. Uni- The Gastrocolic versally pre\ah'nt; also, predoiiilnatliig overall; of univer- Ol^vn-thorde-a. nlin-thoi'd^-a. n. pi. Spong. The [L., fat-skin.) — ©"meii-tl'tlB, n. Pathol. In- Omentmn. sal previili-iifc or Influence.- oiii"iii-prev'a-lencc, n. C'aIcU/tf'ri//i:p . [ < oi.vsthl's + -oid.] 1. Inteatlne; I, liver; o, — oiii"ni-r*''g<'n-cyt, 7*. rnlvcrwU dominion.— oiii"- [»1^> n. flammation of the^ omentum.„..„..,„.„. n-lhord4^an, a. Jt •••*;»»«*'• ni-Hlg-nifl-eaner, n. lUare.) Universal slgnincance o-l) ii'lhiin. ..-lin'thus. n. t-THi. thai or -thl, pi.] A o'mer,o;mi;r, n A Hebrew meaMre*^*"**^; or meaning.— ". Kan-. | Seeing or oiii"iil-«peo'li vie, I xvi, equal to 5.1 pints. = hyiK.thetical anc-stral form of spcmge. prr)liably moet of capacity: a homer (Aj. 80), i able to see all tilings; all-seeing.— om'^ui-HUt'-flVient, nearly renr«-.'iit<-d by the ascons. [< (Jr. cVy^Mo*. fig.] HnMER*. w.j „, «, a. [liare.I Suttlelent for every need; all-suttlclent.— oin- o-mai'kr^n o-mik'ron, n. The fifteenth Hare. In a\\ dlrtu'tlons; ni. ». ,>rtii'. ejaeulailon retm-sentfng o-ml'k ron, or uiv'a-Kant* a. I I Wandering Om, 1 1. A mystic thf nanif of th.- Supreme lU'lng ultend by Hindus on »ol- letter and fifth vowel in the Oreek alphabet (O, o): equiv- roaming everywhere.— oin-nlv'a-lence, n. [Hare.] Oin- nipotenee.— oiii-niv'a-lf*nt, «. lltare.l Omnipotent.— eniii o*c»u*loii*. of iiivrKuiion to Brahm. nlent to Knglish short 0. [ < Gr. mikron, little o; 0, o; all sorts words. ih(>-r — oiii"nl-ver-ba'rl-ou», a. Using of Th.-*- i,nh.i[uil ipKi« | AdUi. Vamna. and MithraJ are mU'ron. lUMlt. of miATVvT, small.] O-mt'cront- '"^ — oni-niv'i-dence, n. The [wwer of seeing all things; th»' flmt mkI tiiKOfot iiisni(<-M«lton« of the Kternal E«*«iee, and oiH^Wna'tion'*', ». A for'foreboding;"~~ presaging. nr«> tyjpi&ed by tbe three ietteraeompoeing the niritio syllable OJf universal virion. oni-uiv'i*den-cyt> „~./|.Hf.,,^ nni'i-nDs n 1 . the nature of or lAarked **™ ' Of or A CM. ftoxiKB Wi&artU ch. 7. p. W. |P. T. ^.] " Covering a full collection of Wnxuas by anI.,"^"?'ome ; as, an omnibus 2. Id modern occiiltiam. the spiritual eaaence; absolute omened cases goodneaa and truth. Aant. •' WhatVkal ws*wsB it.it thatIkat paMedyuawwI lilie1i1ii> an ominousntnitinitJt breathhrpath — . ' . ^ ^ ^ . . -oma. Pathol. A suffix denoting a tumor or morbid oni'nI'buA, /'• 1. A long four-wheeled passenger-ve- Like a »hiver of fear, or a tonch of death I aidefl, growth; as, sarcoma. [< iir. -Amn.] J. B. O'Kkilly The Ride nf Collins Graves rt. S. hicle with entrance at the rear and seat* along the •M'a-dliaan, em'a-dAn. n. A Rlmpletun; madman; fooh seats outside readied by Serving as an omen in general; prognostic. [< L. and BouictimeK with additional a slang term **t abase. 2. ominoKnit, (omin-); see 4)MEN.] steps. This aandr-haired, nabvaoaed. Diuninly omad'kaun was trtilj < omen n//r.— n. OmnihHKes were only introduced the year before George IV. Uw^ bit <>r human g^ die behevedhim to be. K. Ltmk Lurtoa —om'i-nouH-ly, oni'l-nouM-nes«, died [iicjfll. H. V1ZCTKU.Y Glances Back Ihrtiuuh Seventy Years Through the Lrmg Sightn bk. iii. ch. fi, p. 126. [11. *n.] o-inlfi'iil-bl(e,o-mis'i-bl.rods. or iwires. obmUte; invariant. out; ieud, 19 = faturc; e = k; cbureli; db = (Ae; bo, ains, i^k; so; (bin; sh = aiure; F. boA, dttne. <,/rom; ^, omnipotence 123S Oiieliocotylidse

BAKs, -RODS, or -wiBKs. uader bvs.— o. box (Arch.), a oin'pha*oln{e, em'fa-sin, a. Of, pertaining to, or ob- take oath on the Bible. (3) In superposition or addition to; lurgv box on a level with and coiincrting with Ihe stage tained from unripe fruit: frequently said of oils. [< over and above; besides; as, loss on loss; heaps on heaps. In the relation of expecting support or fulfllniL-nt of a theater or opera-house. Gr. omp/tukhios, < omphax, unripe fruit.] (4) from; om-nlp'o-leure, em-mp'o-t^n^, n. 1. Unlimited because of; hence, by the authority or assurance of; as, on f Derived from Greek otfip/uilos, the n&vvl: omplial-, Christ; on your recommendation; one' « or and universal power; e8i)eeially. Infinite power as a di- on word honor. otnplialo-. f combining forms. — om"pha-lel-co'Mi8, (5) In the relation uf being supported bv or susjM'nded vine attribute; alnughtiuess; hence, a being of unlimited ji. Piithoi. Ulceration of theunibillcu8.— oiii-phal'ic,«. from; as, a fish on a hook; a picture hangnigou a wall; to power; God: strictly applicable to God only. Of or pertaining to the navel; innbllieal,— oiii"|iliu-Ii'- walk on stilts; to move on the hands and feet. considereil as in action yit^lda attributes of a second tiH* n. J^itkol. iniiammatiou of theumbilk-us.— oiii'phn- T%t MMence Owing to the submerged state of the ground on which they live, Divine essence is contemplated as n. Piithol. Umbilical hernia.— oni'pliu-ldilc, dan. Wben. for example, the lo-cele. the Indians often raise their houses on piles sunk in the water. stniply enersrixinK. thiii is umnipotemv: ua co^ixinff, this is oni- n. 1. The navel. -Z, Mol. Au oniphulodium.— oiii"phu- Agassiz Journey in Brazil ch. 5, p. 16a. [t. a f, '68.] niacKfUc*-: a« adApiin^r mean:) to ends, this is wisdom. W. O. T. lod'ie* a. Omphalic.— oiii'''plia-lo'ili -uiii, n. Jiot. the relation ShEdi> IkM/nuttic Theology vol. i. pt. iii, ch. 6. p. 336. (8. '89.] The navel-shaped mark left on the liilum uf a seed by the 2. In of following after, as a soal, or from a position. 2. l'nlimite*l power within a certflin sphere, or of a cer- passage of the vessels of the raphe, oiii'pliu-loflet.— higher (I) In space: In the wake of; at the Hot. liesembling the navel.— heels of; as, they are om track; pestilence tain kind; as, the omnipoietice of gravity, otn-nlp'- oiii'pha-loid,a. oiii'phii- my followed on ti. Divination frttm the heels of famine. In rational sequence: o-lt'u-oyj. lo-iiiau'^cy* Folk'lore. the nuniU-r (2) hi) In conse- of knots In a new-born clilld's navel-string to ascertain how quence of; by reason of; In consideration of; for the sake om-nip'o-tent, a. Possessed of or om-ulp'O'tent, 1. many more children its uf; as, on coming to an agreement they separated; on your characterized by omnipotence. mother will bear.— oin"- life remain. (6) At the charge or door of, as blame or re- Brili&h citisenship is as omnivoteut as Roman was. pha-lo-iiieM"<>ii-ter'ic, sponsibility; against; as, the blame be on me; a plague on Emerson English Trxiiis oh. 9. p. 140. [it. h. a co. '89.] a. Of or pertaining to the bim. (c) In accordance with; as, to go fast on purpose; to navel and the run on a wager. (3) In temporal 2. [Hnmorons.] Capable of or flttetl for anything; thor- mesentery. sequence: Next m order oiii " plia - lo - iiie» " e - to; as, Monday follows on Sunday. oughgoing; unmitigated; as, an om«*/x>^*i/i( villam. [< ra'ici.— oiiiphalonieH- 3. In the relation of being directed, tending, or moving h.om/iipoft/t(f-)f', 'o-l<'nl-ly, adv. the umbilical vesicle with mansion faces on the river; he resolved on amendment. om'^nl-pres'eiK'cem'ni-prez'gns, 7i. 1. The quality the small Intestine In the of being everywhere present at the same time; unlimited fetus: occasionally found In 4. In the relation of covering with, environing, or lying along or is or universal presence; in theology, universal presence of the adult. — n iii " p U a - by; as, London on the Thames; the building n. Ternt. is on. Broadway; 071 one's the divine essence, as opposed to' the diffusive presence lop'a-ffUH, A a hat head; on every side. 5. double monster united at In the act or process of; under the action or influence of; and identity of pantheism, and the divisive or distributive the umbllleus.- oiii"plia- as, to l>e on guard; on a journey; on, the point of going- presence of the common notion. lo-phlc-bl'tis, «. I\t- AnAn omphalopagus.OmnhalnnftD-na the house is on fire. 6. In the relation of being engaged Immensity characterizes the relation of Qod to space viewed ab- ^^^^^^ jjjfl,^,,,,,^^,;,^ ^^ ^„^. The Siamese the in the or stractly in itself. Omnipresence characterizes the relation of God twins, showing umbIlIcalvcIn.~Olll"pha- making of comprised in; as, on the "Times"; on anatomical structure of their con- to his ci-eatures as they severally occupy their several positions in |«M_«v/«>lii tt *,/ T)io a commission; a laborer on a public work. space. The divine essence is immense in its being, absolutely. nectingbaud:^,^,liver;B,xiphoid own omrTha^lonsvchltPs^ Om 'And J shall be twenty times happier, sir,' said I, with a little — 1 It is omnipresent relalivelv to all his creatures. cartilage; C. peritoneal pouc&es. " "hj - lo^^iV^y ,cMte 6\ hope innocent — rtattery," if my employment is to l>e on the Dic- A. A. Hodge OutlmeH Theol. ch. 8, p. 141. [c. « bbos. '79.] (Oin'^plia-Iop^sy-cliite, /. w. If?".), h. Same as Hesv- tionary.' Dickens David Copperfleld ch. 36, p. 258. [c. a. h.] ' 2. Loosely, presence everywhere within a given sphere; CHAST. Oin'* pha-lop-My'chistl:;' Oiii''''phu-lop-Hy'- 7. Hence, in the intere'stor in favorof; as, to risk money double-convex lens. ubiquity: "applied figuratively to that which moves ra|> 'pba-lop'tert, n. A OH a competitor; to bet o« one's success. 8. In reference different oni''pha-lop'tict.~-oni'^plia-1or-i'lia^u:i-a* n. I'a- idly, soas to be in all the parts of a place in rapid to; concerning the subject of; about; as, treatise thot. UmbiiJcal licniorrhatje, parllcularly at birth.— oiii^'- a on snccession. [< LL. otn/iipt'iEsenU')^, < L. oinnis^ all, -4- rhetoric; to decide plia-lor-i'hex'iN, 11. Pathol. Iluptiire of the umbilical on a plan; he dwelt o?i the theme. 9. prsejrt€ti{t-)ii; see present^o.] oiii"iiI-pre8'eu-cyt. cord. oin^'plia*lo-uen"ror-i h^x'iHt.— oiii'plia- Into, or in a state of; in: in this usage mostly archaic; em'ni-prez'v'nt, Essentially pres- oni'^nl-pres'eiit, a. los, n. 1. Anat. The navel i£. irt Ar inj (1) A round as, to gather on heaps; to fall on sleep; the worst case on ent everywhere at the time; universally present; same stone in the temple of Apol- record. 10. In old and now obsolete relations: (I) At. present within a given sphere; ubiquitous. lo at , supposed everywhere to (2) By. (3> For. (4) From. In. (6) Into. Of. mark the middle (5) (7) sense ever. It i& . point A of duty pursues us ojunipresent like the Deity. (8) Over. (9) To. (10) With. [< AS. on, an, related to Webster Works, Murder of J. White m vol. vi, p. 1(6. [l. b. ("navel") of the earth. (2) The boss or the middle IN, prep.] — on'slianif"er, n. A dependent or servile follower; a — oni'^nl-pre-scn'tlal, a. [Rare.] Denoting or point of a shield.— oin"- plia-lo-so'ter, n. Ob- hanger«on.— onsside. adi-. At or on the right side; specif- implying universal presence. ically, In football, hockey, stet. An instrument em- etc., not off=>side. See off-side. oin^'ui-pr<*v'a-lent,oiii^'ni-i*e'iC<^n-cyttetc. Sccomni-. ployed to aid the hand In — on tbe alert, beam, contrary, etc., see the nouns. om-uis'cieuoe, ein-nish'tns, «. 1. Knowled^ of all replacing the umbilical cord on2, prep. [Scot.] Without; as, to obey on being punished. Ice. things; unlimited or infinite knowledge: an attribute of wlien prolapsed. — oin"- I < OH. without.] God. See quotation under omnh'otence. 2. Loosely, plia-lot'o-iiiy, H. Obstet. oii-i, prefix. The preposition or adverb on used as a pre- very extensive knowledge. oiii field on the batter's left; as, theow side. II. n. The por- rarely shrubs — the evening-primrose family with op- oin-iiiv'u-teant, oin-niv'i*deiice, etc. See omni-. tion — of a cricket-field on the batter's left; as, he struck a posite or alternate usually entire leaves and variously Oni-iilT'o-ra, em-niv'o-ra, n. ;V. Mam. A division of ar- ball to the on. ranged clusters of mainly tetramerous perfect and sym- artiodactyl ungulates with a non-ruminant stomach and a. n. One. on^t, & oont. metrical flowers, with the stamens as many or twice as bunodont molars, including Suidm, HippopotamidsB., etc. on, adv. 1. In or into such a position with reference many as the calyx-lobes. It embraces 23 genera and [Neut. pi. of L. otn/iivorutt; see omnivorous.] to something, as a vehicle, a table, or a stage, as to be about 330 species, mainly distributed in temperate cli- — oni'iii-vore, fi. One of the Omnivora. in contact with and supported by it; in a position, state, mates. [< Onagra.] O-na^gra-rl'e-a?!. om-iilv'o-roiiM, em-niv'o-rus, a. 1. Eating or living or condition of adherence; as, he got on before the wagon — on''a-g,ra'oeous, a. upon food of all kinds indiscriminately; all-devouring: had fully stopped; to order the soup brought on,* tocUng o'nan-lsm, o'nan-izm, n. Med. Masturbation. [< used also figuratively; as, oinjiivorous birds; an omniv- on. 2. In or into such a position as to cover, surround, or Onan (Gen. xsxviii, 9).l — o'nan-tst, n. orous taste for literature. overspread properly; in the proper place as an exterior o-nRp'po, o-nap'p5, 7*. [Braz.] A reddlsh^gray nvctiplthe- The omni'rorous reader is often weak and essentially ignorant. attachment or decoration; as, to put oh a cloak, a ring, cine monkey or teetee (CallithHx discolor). Called also MuKGER On the Threshold ch. 17*. [H. M. CO. '88.] 7. p. & a label, etc. 3. In the same direction or manner; in a r^ff}itriloquiiit»m.onkey. 2. Specificallv. in zoology: (1) Eating both animal and continuous course or succession; with unbroken advance; on'^ga-paWda, en'sc-pflr'da. n. [Braz.] The puma. vegetable food: said of Bears, crows, etc. without stopping; forward; ahead; along; as, walk on; oncet, n. The ounce {Pelis uncia). The true paradise birds are omnivorr)U8, feeding on fruits and we sang the first stanza, then the second, and so on once, wuns, adv. 1. One time, without repetition; one losecta. A. K. \VAU^CEitfa/aj/.^rcAeen. omo-, om-. Derived from Greek 6mo8, shoulder: combi- draft, etc. 5. In or into existence or operation; in ADELAffiE A. Procter Legend of Provence st. 12- ning forms. [For other won-ls beginning with orno-, see course of proceeding or taking place; in progress; as, to 3. At any time; ever; as, if once virtue is lost all is lost. vocabulary place.] — o"ino-dyn'i-n, n. Pathol. Pain in bring on a swoon: the'strife is on. Nothing- once existing hfis entirely disappeared. the shoulder; rheumatic rmin In the shoulder-joint.— o^'iiio- Irresolute; unsettled; Phrases: — neither ofl'nor on, D. T. ANSTKD Great Stone Book intro., p. 21. [C. A P. '63.] hy'oid, '/. Of or pertalnln^c to tlic shoulder-blade and the fickle.- ou and on, without ever ceasing; for a longtime hyoid bone; as, the oj/(r>/t^ou/ muscle, o'^iiio-hy-oi'de- without ceasing; continuously. — on to, to or toward and 4. [Local, U. S.] Used as a mere expletive; as, listen an:,— o'^'inw-hy'oid, v. A thin dlKastrlc muscle of the on; on; to; upoo: sometimes written onto: an expression once. S. At some future time. 6t. Once for all. neck naswhiK from tlie slioulder-blude to the liyoid bone. analogous to into, but avoided by purists as colloquial or Once is used sometimes as a noun, preceded generally by See lUus. under — triangle. o'^iiio-hy-oi'de-as, n. vulgar.— lo be on [Slang]. 1, In sporting parlance, to thtM or that; as, answer me this once, 1. e., this one time, it [-t»K-\, pl.\ The omohyoid.— o-inniMe-iiin, n. L-de-a, accept a bet or bets; have a bet or bets made. »i, [Eng.] is occasionally used also as an adjective, with the sense of D/.J Oruilh. The pterygoid ' bone.— o"nio-pho'ii-on, Ji. To be tipsy or getting drunk.— to be on to one, or on that formerly was '; quondam; as, the once governor. I-Bi-A, p/.l Ef^ct. A vestment in the Greek Church Similar Slang], to be one's to it I aware of Intentions: understand [< AS. dnes., < an, one.] onyst. to the pallium of the Latin Clmrch. the situation.— to be well on, to have a fair chance of — all at once, all of a sudden.— at o, 1. At exactly Over this [the bishop's rol«) is worn another robe called the winning one's bet or bets.— try it on LSlang], make the the same time; at the same Instant; simultaneously; together; 'omtfphorion,' now of silk, but once made of sheep's wool, as typ- attempt; attempt It. as, all spoke at once. ^, Without delaying; immediately; ical of the lost sheep which Christ the Uood Shepherd bore on his on', iwep. [Etymologically, on and «;>o« differ in mean- as, come at otice.—t'or o., one time at least; at lust; as, he boulden. C. A. Stoddaru Acrttss Russia 56. '91.] ch. 9, p. (s. ing, upon adding to on the sense of being lifted or raised has won/or once.— o. in a way [Colloq.], once at any rate. 7t. en-seth'mu.'t en-keth'mus, 72. [Uare.] — o'no-plate, The shoulder-blade; scapula.— o"ino- u^; but the distinction has never been clearly made in on-cetli'nius, or A S'la'to-sco^py, n. Divination by ln8i>eetion of a shoul- braying. L< Or. onkethmo'i, bray.] usage. On is i)referable in such expressions tis " to ride CT-blade; scapuUmancy.— n. Crust. o-mots'le-Kile, " •' He has recourse to trite (iijures of bad rhetoric, hylactlmus and on a horse," to be on the road," to write ort, a certain The thoracic part of the carapace, or that behind the eer- oncethmus. Ftizedward Hkia. False Philol. p. 101, note. [s. '72.] vtou groove: onposed to cephaloHtegite. See Illus. under subject," and in most of the uses noted below.] On"<'lil-dI'l-dae, e^'ki-dai'l-di or -dt'i-de, «./>/. Chncfi. CsysTACEA.— o'^tno-Htor'num, Ti. [na. A median On and upon so frequently coincide in U8«, tbat they may aptly pM A littoral family of ditrematous slugs having a thick OMUiea process

•ofa, firm, 9Bk; at, f&re, ^^ccord; element, jfr = over, Sights § =s usage; tin, machine, g = wnew; obey, no; not, nSr, at^m; full, rule; bot, bom; ofBle —

onehoiipliere 1930 oiioniatopceia

the In or Into one tlvated for its tops or leaves. Called also cibol, rock'le^k^ sis flucker^ On'oho-cofvle. w (t. e.) \ < Gr. on- 2. Of the same nature; same.— in one.

hook, fphaira, sphere "' km, -i- ] ^ -j, thewrwinsoV things alWaJynientioiK^^ o-ni/'ro-crit'ie, -crit'ics, etc. See onkikocritic, etc. ft. orchid of the genue Onctdium. oii'old. onsid, An on'e-cle+, n. SeeoNicoLo. onisc-, i Derived from Greek o«i*A:(w, a wood-louse (< On-cld'I-um, en-sid'i-umor-cid'i-um. rt. Bot. A very one'hoodt, h- I'uUy; oneness, one'headti one'hedt. oiifsci-. >o«fts, ass); combining forms. — O-nis'ei-dw, of beautiful tropical Amen- large extremely variwl genus O-nel'das, o-nai'daz, n. jU. A tribe of North-American onlsco-. ) n. pi. Crust. A family of isopods, especially can orchids with short pseudobulbs, few leaves, and a Indians of Iroqiioian stock and belonging to the Five OniAi-oUlcu, wnth caudal appendages niucTi exserted and hanibtome tlowers. They are among the al>out Oneida inandlhles not palplgerous; wood-lice, pill -bugs, and_ sow- loose raceme of Xations. formerly inhabiting the country ' most prized of cultivated orchids, O. PafmU), the butterfly- Lake, in New York. Portions of the tribe still reside in bugs. O-niNVit.— o-niH'cid. (/. & w.— o-nls'coid, a. — o-nif*'ci-lbrm, a. Having the fonn of an oniscid or plant, being one of the l)est-known. Gr. onko», \nyok.] York, Wisconsin, and Canada. See American. [< Xew wood-louse; of or pertaining to the Oniiodv and hindmost feet subdorsal and uncinate. with a copulatory organ formed by the feet rril'i-<*i«*inl! o-ui"ro-eril'ic*j*I:,— o-nei"ro-dyn'- ment.- o-iiiH'co-Miorph, 7(.— o-ni«"co-nior'phouat n, (t. g.) Gr. onkiurut, hook, -f On-cln'o-pUH. [< i-n, >i. NIglitniare.— o«"ei-rol'o-tty* /' foiEs, )J^.^ r/.— O-nis'cHH* n. Cruxt. 1, A genus typical of Oiii»- f(Htt.] oii"cl-nop'o- jtoait, Oii''cl-nop'l-diet.— The Rcii-ntlrtc study of dreams or dream-lore: also, a study riilx. "i, [0-] [-CI, pi.] An Isopod of this genus; a wood- dld. //.— on^'cl-nop'o-dold, a. or collection of dreams with their interpretation.— ou^et louse. onco-. Derived from Greek onkoxy mass: a combining rol'o-iriNi, ».— a-Hei'i*o-nian''cy4... ». Fotk*lore. t)lvl- on-kot'o-my,_ «.... Same as ONCOTOMY. hy fj. t\nf\a *.•'* i form.— on'co-|?r»ph, n. Surg. An instrument for re- nation means of dreams.— nn'^ei-rop'o-liHtt*nii'^ei-rnu'n.liHtt. ». An\i\ on'lay", en'lg',An'ia- n. Something placed on and projecting onelrocritlc- cording variations in the size of pans or members of the oneirocrltlc.-o.nei'ro-»M-o''nist, n. An j^ relief from a surface, as a mounting or decoration, ''^; «<»«>- tK>dy. as the kidneys.— on-col'o-iy, ". M^it. The aggre- o-nei'ro-»co^py, C. (on^ei-rosVo-py* on-less' en-les' coni fDial! Unless gate of scieollflc knowlcdK'* relating to tumors; a treatise - . . on tumors.- on-coni'e-irr. n. An Instrument lo meas- one ll-iie»«T» one lyT. a. Only. a.Chlef; especial. are variations tn parts nt tin- human body: usually a part of i _ oii-li'tU, en laltto o>- -ltU», n. Same as gixgititis. oue'meiltt, h. state of harmony: concord an oncograph.- bn-t-ot'o-iny, 1. *«/». Theop^ratlon A on-lofte'+. «J an aljaceas. inj(, a. Looking on; also, looking forward. [Scot.] 1. first stage of on'er. won £r. n. [Slang.)" One by preeminence: an eftec- ,,- . ,,, |- on'come', en'cum', n. - The ilone in it* class- havine no fellow - • as, "' 'J "'";..' ^. .'"'* .'''''..'>" rainfall or snowfall. tual one; a stroke or effort that requires no repeating; v"" \ . any undertaking or labor. 4. A ,.„•.,. , •. or mates; solitary; single; as. his only hope; an otUy .W„l- mysterious att«;k of dlae«e; «!«>. g«U.er- 3. .^ „„^^».>,"."^;|'«-|•»X1;: Tlll'^T Adapted or Intended daughter. 2. Standing alone by reason of superior ex- mg or sweiimg. . »_ . 1.1 f'*r carrying burdens; constituting a burden. l< h. onera- cellence; preeminently distinguished. oii'euin"ln:r. on'ctnn'ing, a. & n. Approacmng. yjun, iotier < ohuh ), burden.] He U the onlff man of Italy, Always excepted my dear Claudio. eo'co-sim's-t^-r, «. Metal. in- on''<*«-j»lni'e-ler, An on'er-aiet* r/. To burden or load.— on"er-a'tiont, n. Shakespeare Much Ado about Sothing act iii, bc. 1. strumeiii for determining the specific gravity of a molten on'er-ou», en'vr-us, a. 1. Burdensome or oppressive. 3+. Mere; unaided. [< AS. (/om. nne«*, 'c/r once, onyst. Oii^fo-lyl'l-dw, , T. L. CUYI.ER Site toSoruxiy ch. p. 197. [C. * BROS. '88.] seir, pron. One s own personality; 17, A family of bugs. On-col'y-lus, «. (i. g) L< ^r. oiie^nelf', wun pronoun one. 2. In one manner or for one purpose alone; simply; onktut, barb. -^ tul/f^, kiiob.j o"e e eelf: the reflexive of the indefinite TorofeoiMaeVMmre*!!!? the »re«t«t triumph. merely; as, Ijorn only to die. -on-COl'y-lld. rt. & «.-OII-COt'y.Iold. a. P/*-a«urM pt. i. ch. 2. 31. [uxc%.] is only out of even beauti- ( , J. Lubbock 0/Z./A p. It doors that death and decav become on-darra. en-dat-ru. . /. .mrdu-lru. J?.». «. The Amert- nmnkrut. Ind.) [< one 4- self.] ful. T. W. HluoiNsON Out'Door rtipers. My Out'Door Study CHD iProb. Am. , . , ^ p. S5«. [T. A F. '63.J on^d*^', fiii'd*'. ./. IF.: Waved, wavy. Cp. rNDE. onMyi. oite'tal'^dcd. w on'-sai'ded, a. 1. Pertaining to. hav- on'dluie, wn din. ;*. [F.] Same as isnixi. ing, or considering only one side; hence, unoalanced, 3. In full; wholly; solely; as, they are only evil. 4t. Th« tylphs and tmdinn. And the ae&-kin^ and queens. unfair, or partial; mcomplete. Preeminently. [< AS. ifnll^e, < dnUr; see only, a.] . _ . all. m 00 the WBVee built a «ty. histor- •*"*?.?IOC, almost.— only not all, almost We mtart not take a oR«««/dfd view of the oririn of an _/"r**''''' . .» . "»" *i a DWBX MmCDITH WaniUrrr, (Vn/cvst. "V* as, is ie»I Uienrture. NiBBUHB tec(. oni/fj<.o/iton«-u-. by L. Schmitz. on'ly, «wy. Except that; exceptmg; but; the day on^diuff. nn'dlng. n. [Scot.] A fall of snowornUn. lect. ii. p. i. [JAB. w. .70.] pleasant, only rather cold. — Italn or snow. see but. on-dliiir'iii. " 2, Bot. Having tlie port* or organs turned to one side; Synonyms; ou till, '^I'l dl. . K ' Thi-v Hay; It U iald: used also substan- •"'• '- ' -'--'.t.t .,,1 "' "" '"J-"'-"""^"^'"^^: tively; an, t' tin. Suil'^id^'t ennS": SK'oe.V"l«„r. enWn'tSr, n. Ram. AMg. A fab- on'^do-yani' .ii.«. IF.] Wavy; waved. "'"'^t*''; hmnan and partly a«inine, depicted „. P""}- •one. <'fi' li-signating certain organic com- '^-»^^^:,t^'a"2xVZ,..- onr'-.I-ded-no... l"""" - *- **" in Roman sculptures. [< lA^. o?(OC€ntaui-u8, < KjT.ono- jwjundi.. .rtain comiwunds' that•*— have the on'e»tt, «. Honest, ^l kentauros, onm, aw*, ke/itauixts-, centaur.] (<' on-ellie'+, adr. Scarcely. OD-ethe«'ti an-Deth«an-nethe't. < + general form 1.1 . til AH hevft/,- H \ and (2) ke- " ' fall, *|. on"o-ce'rln, en'o-sl'rin, W. (o-n»s'cr-in, £*.), n. A tones, as the The dcKCent or oncoming of evening. 3. An attackatta or white crystalline comiwund (C'lallaoO) contained in the one*. 'f- 1"" i,j^,.,,i f raune Kibe united In one " '"oot. of the spinous rest-harrow (Ono?m. spinosa). [<- ' onset,oni iiiiif of prey wUlj talon* of a different tineture from the body. On'o-cle'a. en'o^ill'a or -cM'a, ii. Bot. A small genus -iiaiHeviliole.III h»f„.'fu,iij7»mgie.ine»maiie»i.i,S™.n.I.; |f.. <„„(,;,, claw. < L. uu^kIiw, claw.) au''ii\ie't. of large, haiidaome, tufted polyiiodiaceous ferns with lural;I as. w«t person, on< Donse. on'Ro'Inif, en'gO'ing, a. Going on; progreaslng; con- conspicuouslvconspicuously dimorphousdimorphoui. fronds, the fertile being mucht lire,Ofl<»toiiiio("tw,lif.. from iu Inmo* f~UBg.loll.o»tii.<»toiiiK Gr. on • Mr on'KOenl. inallv found at San Onofre Mexico niaine.1. 4. Single in kind; thesanie; as, the three are o-nlco-lO. n. MInerul. A variety of onyx used , „ o-nlc'o-lo, '3;'J'""''"^^'p»^^^^ foolish talK. i< ur. o,»m. of o„t height, or are one in height. 5*. InmarTlcd; In maklnj cameoa. being cliaracterlied by a l.luWi tljiK;'. ""i^L "looV 1 ngle. et.Onlyoralone. [ME.o/.*,o». < AS. (7n,one.] I^"^«*iV'*i*°';S*'iL"'„*''l''^"X^ " f^lf^'lore. Divination by the use of on i-man si. n. /^W*-tor«. IJlv matJon in . . an'I-m«n .ey» One- in.^ lined In selfJ-explalnlng-explain lag compound adjectives;_. . as. names or of the letters of a name, ou'^o-nian'ti-att inspection of the nails. dr. wiya-, nail, -t- -mancy.J onetnrmeil. oneieyril. •nr*borned. onedeKsed, -[< - „ on"o-iiini'o-man"cy+i on'o-mo-innn"cyt. u. one>Hinnieil... ouetnvllabled*. onetnirlnired. oii'y-4*ho-inan^eyt; on'y-co-man''oyl.ou'v-co-nian^oyi. — on'^i-mnn'tlr. on^'o-mnn'lic-nl, Phrases, etc. :—-allall one, preei«lyureeint'ly thr wme;>«ame: of the ^n'lon,o„/|oii, un'vun,un'von, ».u. 1. The wilblee(li"' undergnmud' coated on^o-niaVlIc, on'o-mas'tic, «. 1. Of oriwrtaining to i.r ni> as, it Is one whether we go same of ronwquencp; all bulb of a biennial herb (AUium ('e})a) of the lily family a name; consisting of a name. or 8isy.~one'iand>lhlr''iy. «. A game at cards for- It is remarkable for a strong odor due to an Theonnmatttic siiriilarfties of a highly fantastic philology, m, merly «onmio» and n-w-mhllng vingt-ei-un.— one'^ber"- iIAHat€«). for in«iUncp Yul«al |Jutial| = .\ polio. Tubal = QuAin = Volcanus" iM>m<' Indeflnlte acrid volatile oil that is destroyed by boiling. Though ry« n. Same sm iiKKH-t'.tRiH.— onc dayt Jovis. its native country Telchin in the namto wav that Yahoch^ LeNORMANT Be- day or perltHl hi Itt»' jmuii i>r future: as. one luiigrrin' hin-. - one»earedt. only recently In-en discovered to be central Asia. 2, signature of instrument the a. iDlal.: One year old.- one>handed. 'i. 1. Intended The plant AUhnn Cejxt, which has a tall fistulous scape, 2. Laiv. Designating a an to \w. u»'d or handled with but nuv hand; requiring the use swelling toward the base, apix-aring the second year, body of which is in another handwriting, or the instru- of only one hand; as. a on^»hantlril tool. "2, Having but much uUIer than the cylindrical leaves, and bearing at ment itself.f . [<[ < Gr. (onmnastikos, < onotfui^ name.] ~ or ' one haurl. one>harM«« «• !• Adapted to be drawn oii^o-maK'tf-con,ft'tl-con. on-o-mas'ti-cen. n. A dictionary i! of flWcrs.flowers. i*ne the topton an umbelimiberfTf greenish white 3. AnyXny worked by hone; as, a oiU'hor»e wagon. ^ • . -. .. of varioufl* other plants. of- the same genus, as the of names or terms; commonplacc-lK>ok; specifically [0-], SoroetimM wh«el«d«ep asiid one along th« the collection of Greek natnes made by Julius Pollux in A t>n**hor»e wagoB iknrly ormwled. Welsh onion (Allium lltttuloitum). [< F.oifjnon, < L. n^* onion raised hi tlennu now abl? to point out, on the map. almost every place We " '* lawyer.— oneddeard. a. Hav-""' mild onion brought from Italy, requiring a long wason for mentioned in the OnitmaMicon. C," R. CONDER Tent Work in growing.— on'ion'roueh", n. IProv. Kng.l The oat- PaUatine vol. i., intro., p.^_ 24._ [a. '7H, gni8BUrrAr/i«lA<'r«mrtr«i«e?Mm».havlngaiuberou8node Tr- ..: r . . . atrwA me as sCranffvlj whimsical, and on'o-inn-lech"ny, on'o-ma-tcc'ni. ji. Folk'lore. The art '• '1 '(/, •riKM^bor'a theme. _"•!.*''!.""'**.* Gr. like a _ '^M!??i?i^''' A .« of fontelllug the future by the letters of a name. [< I.- "M rAo Cim^wmi, Tneeday p. IW. [T. a r. '81] •.*tivlchtt*— o.ieyed ouffmn, name. -\- techn?, art.] Having tearful eyes, as If f rtim . I uf two or more things or ononiato-. Derived from Greek ono7?ia{t-), name: a the effect of onions.— o.* lilt- Mtfh, of the same Kind combining form. flnh, n. (Loral, r. S.J The - :; tdontiral wUh: slso.com- en'o-ma-tol'o-ji, n. [-oies, pi.] grenadier i Mnrrurm rupett- oii^o-nia-tol'o-jsy, :i Is one trtth the Fsther. L Hominy hu .Vorniny, Dee. it p.Ja. [P. a A.] lar\'a feeds on onions.— A.* any science. 2. A treatise on names. [< onomato- -|- ibe sen«« to translucent |«per resembling n. A word Tonne;.. all it* great- formation of words; 1 iiael Angeloji with the skin of an onion: onion- The Onton*fly. thing signifieil; also, the imitjitive ,'i I ti'i>" paper.— o.fwrentb* " onomatopo-ia. I Abbr. of onomatop(KIA.1 skin ,- a,< the^...,.".«.wfly; b, an onion-bwlb at--.- iMNUi ^f < KMK ritin Speaking.Odd People p.«^ [T. 'St.] -uT- An ornament In form like a t^kedby a nnmJ»er of larva-^in- on"o-niat'o-|»la»»iM. on o-mat opiazm. w. A name .Saiiii- u'l I. Uf. (.NK i.m,'K. SeecxocK- wreath of onions.— top o.. a ion-mai«otii); c. an onion-bulb onomato- Gr. pltwrna, fnrmed by onomalopo'ia. "^[< + ' — al one, 1. In agreement or accord; In harmony. varlerv of onion produclnif nearly devoured by the maggots. form] -' The BibI- i% at on«> wtlh ftcl^-nr^ in afflrminir th»* conrtancy nf a bulbless on-o-mat-o-poe'la, en'o-mat-o-pl'va or -peVi-a n^ natural law. J. W. I)awm>m Sature and the ItiMr lert. i, p. 31. 3rst"allk"5!id^La!uriU^'a^^ o., Hpecles (AlliHtn jiMttUtMumi with long fibrous r

ononialopceic 1230 ooscopy

formed in imitation of natural sounds, »» tckizz^ spiof^, and attended by suppuration; specifically, paronychia, on"- ferns, a sporangium.— o"o-the'cal, fl.— o^o-lo'ci-a, — ii.pl. Vonch. The Oni/cho- n. Ovulation.— 7i.p/. The botvtcofc. 2. jRAft. The seltTtion und use of words to y-chi'ti(*t, <>-uych'i-i, 0-ol"o-coi'de-a, Mam. /m- t^MtAt(£»-.— o-nych'i-nn* a. & n.— o*nyrh'i-uiii, ti. jt>/ace»/a//(/,ormarsupialsandmonotremes.—o-ot'o-cuidt imitate natural sounds. 3. An imitative word. I-i-a, pi.] A small claw; specifically. In entomology, an a. & K.— o-ofo-coi'de-aiu " & h.— o-ot'o-cous, «. Mmay intaijectMNU »r» what are railed ' imiutive words.' ur on- appendage of the last tarsal joint, between the claws.— Kgg'iaylng; oviparous.- o'«-(ype, n. Jlelminth. The Owiatopctiaa: — SimncU produvMl (,al by inanimate objects^ diiyr' On^y-clio-don'ti-dap, n. pi. Ich. A Devonian fam- part of the egg-passage of a trcmatode which receives the ...... puff, (b) By donr. - - Uck-Ukck. . . banc. whop, ily of rhlpidistlaii fishes with cycloid scales and a dentig- efferent ducts of tlic shell-glands, and In which the egg is . . . tu>whit. ... animate object*— bow-voVfinew.emw.pQtT, ha erous presvnipbv.-'Ial bone. Oii^v-cIio'iIun, h. (t. g.) fertilized and perfected. Outtiue* Acfidenct ch. 17. p. :ilO. [macm.) ha R. HoRUS SMff. — on^y-eho-don'tid, «.— o«''y-cho-don'(oid, a. oo'bitt ubit. II. A caterpillar, the oublt. [< LL. onomatopcna. < Gr. oriomafofxnia, < onyma^ & «.— on^y-clio-gry-po'sii** n. PiUkol. An abnormal O"o-co-rytl»'l-d»e, O'o-co-rith'i-di or -d^, n. id. name, -l-pow5, make.j on^o-niat'o-psi. growth of the nails with Inward curvature— ou'y-oho- Conch. A family of taenioglossate gastropods with multi- n. Divination bv means of the finger-nails. on'^o^mat'^o-pce'lis en*o-umt*o-pI'ic. a. Pertaining iiian"cy, cuspid central and lateral teeth and unciform marginal oii'y-iiian"cyJ. ou^y-cno-my-co'sin* n. I^ithol. to formed or characterizeo-4-*^r. Xww, fish.] O"o-co-ryt'i- tive; as. an ononiatopceic name, on'^o-iuafo-pce'- I-si,jt>/.] I\i(hol. Any disease of the nails, on'^y-elioii'- diej.—o"o-co-rytn'ld,?'.—o"o-cor'y-tliold.a. l-aii or -pcie'ous^. o-sist; on"y-clio'sisJ,— «n"y-clio-pnlli'ic, n. i\i- O"o-de"o-pod'l-dfie, 0"o-di'[<9/- -de'lo-|>od'i-dT or -de. oii^'o-niafo-po-e'etls, on'^o-mafo-pot-e'- thol. Of, pertaining to, or having disease of the nails.— n. pi. Crvsi. A family of monocarpidcan macruruns n. pi. Eutom. The Malacopoda; sIk, n. Siime uj* osoMATOPfEiA. On"y-cnoph'o-ra, having a horizontal rostrum, siecond gnathopods pedi- /Vr//)«//(/f'/. — on"y-chopli'o-ran, «. & n.— on"y- oii'*'o-niat''o-po-et'ic, en*o-mat*o-iK>-et'ic, a. Same form. and first pereiopods subchelate and largest. 0"o- ehouli^o-roiiH, rt.— on"y-ehopli'y-iiia, n. I^tthol. (t. Gr. as ONOXATOIHKIC. Painful degeneration of the nails, due to constitutional dis- de'o-piis, n. g.) [< doetdes, egg*8hai)ed, + foot.] *ne Bells * [Poe's] U perhaps the rarest instance in thelanfftta^ ease, as In leprosy or syphilis. ffot/ti, — o"o-de"o-pod'id, ?*.— o"o-dc-op'- of the snevestiveness of rhvnie and the power of onomatopoetic oii'j'-olia» en'i-CQ, n. 1. An ingredient of the Mosaic o-doid, a. words. I>etvl. Eng, Z,//. vol. ii.th. 6,p.38a. [s.c. O.] }). A. H. WKUiH incense, probably the operculum of a strombus. 2. oo'dles, fl'dlz, & adv. [Southern U. S.] Abundance; a great deal. ood'linKHt; ood'lint^t. — on"'o-iiial"o-po-et'lo-al-ly, acit\ The onyx. [L., ace. of onyXj mussel, < Gr. onyx^ nail.] o-/s . an assauJt, especially of troops, upon an enemy or forti- pods having an elongated body and suckers armed with TheOolakan ( and an Oolakan-rake. fication. 2. An attack of any kind, as of fever or chills; claws or hooks. On'''y-clio-teu'tlils, n. (t. g.) [< paciflcwi)^ "setting oNYCHo- -|- Gr. teuthis.^ squid.] oii^y-clio-teu'- seizure, as of passion. 3. A about; outset; start. — {Thaleichthys pacijicus) that ascends the rivers of 4t. That which is set on; an appendage. tlild, «.— oii"y-clio-teu'tliold, a. northwestern America in immense shoals. It is nearly a on'set"*, n. [North. Eng.] A dwelllng-liouse and out- on'yin, en'im, H. Zool. A technical name or term. [< foot long, very oily, and is used when dried as a candle. buildings. Gr. onyma, name.]— on'y-mal, a. Pertaining to onyms. can'dle>llsh"^; oti'la-dioni; oo'lac-kant; on'slaughf , en'slSt', 7). 1. A furious or murderous — «. Pertaining to technical terms any on"y-iiiat'ic» In oo'la-lioiit; oo'la-kont; oti'la-olianj. hostile assault; violent onset: used also figuratively. Bclence.— on'y-inize, vi. To use onyms.— on'y-iny, n. Zool. The use of onyms; technical nomenclature. — oo'ln-kansrake". n. An Implement shaped like a Mr. Clay . . . make* his onslaughts with great impetnoBity, long and very narrow paddle, having one edge of the blade O'nix, Ilr., en'ix, 11'.* (xiii), 1 not alwav« thinking where thev will carry him. o'nyx, E. W.^ or C. S, n. studded with sharp points, by means of which oolakan, T. H. Benton Thirty Years' I'lViP vol. ii, ch. 79, p. 316. [a. '57.] Mineral. (1) A cryptocrystalline variety of quartz con- when in shoals, are swept out of the water Into the canoe. 2. [Scot.] A bloody affray. sisting of layers of different colors, chiefly white with o'o-llte, O'o-lait, n. 1. A granular variety of limestone Synonyms: see Attn ression. brown, black., or red. The layers are usually in even made up of minute nearly spherical concretions about on'stend, «M sted, H. [Prov. Brit. J A farmhouse, on'tttedt. planes, and therefore It is specially adapted for cameos. some minute preexisting particles, and rcsemMinsj in Oii-ta'ri-an ttys'tein. Gtol. The Upper Archieau sys- It is in decorations. now extensively used household structure the roe of a fish : used for tem, above the Laurentian. Among the finest examples of ancient etone»engravtDg which building, and valued on account of the on-tll't, pfp;>. Until, on-iill't. | have descended to us are certain vessels in onyx elaborately orna- ease with which it may be worked and on'to, en'tQ. prep. Upon the top of; to and upon; on to. | mented with cameoswork, such as the Cup of the I*tolemie9, the its soft and pleasing color. Owing to Incorrect usage: see on, adc. Farnese Tazza, and the Mantuan or Brunswick Vase. | their free-working qiialitles, these stones onto*. From Greek dn (out-), being: a combining form. Encyc. Brit. 9th. ed., vol. xvii, p. 777. { are known also as oolitic freestones. \ on^'to-ge-net'le, on'to-jg-net'ic, a. Of or pertaining is all The Onyx the type of stones arranged in bands of different The Bedford oolite occurs In the i to ontogeny -{- [< onto- genetic] on-tog'e-iial^; colours, RUSKIN Deucalion vol. i.ch. 7, p. 108. iG. A. '79. Subcarbonlferous In Lawrence county, \ on^to-Ke-net'lf-alf; on"lo-gen'lct.— on"to- Indiana, and Is used extensively (•2) In the Old Testament {Ex. xxviii, 20), a stone in the through- ge-nel'lc-al-ly, on^to-gen'ic-al-ly, out the United States. adt\ breastplate of the high priest: translating the Hebrew oii-tog'e-iilHt, en-tej'e-nist, «. A student of or a per- 2. [0-] The Oolitic system. [< oo-j 8/ioham. See plate of gems, fi^. 6. S2. Pathol. A col- son versed in ontogeny. 4- -LITE.] lection of purulent matter, within the layers of the cor- The Mlcrostruc- on-tog'e-ny,on-toj'e-ni, n. Biol. Thehistory of the ev- o'o-llthe« O'o-laith, n. The fossil egg nea, having the shape of a finger-nail; pterygion. 3. ture of Oolite. olution of the individual; genn-history; the development of any oviparous animal, as a bird, (1) The piddock (Pholas dactylus). (2) A razor-shell. of the individual; henogenesis: opposed to ;7/i7/to!7(=?;y. reptile, etc. [Imp. Diet.] oo- Gr. lit/ios, stone.] [F., < L. onyx (onyck-\ < Gr. onyx (o/iych-\ nail, claw.] [< + o"o-llt'fc, O'o-lit'ic, a. Of, pertaining to, or resembling Each organism in the course of its individual ontogeny repeats — (^alifornian onyXf a dark amt>cr-colored and brown the history of its ancestral development, oolite.— Oolitic system aragonlte, used in ornamentation.— 3Iexican o,, a vari- (Geol.). the Jurassic: formerly so F. M. Balfour vol. i, intro.,p. 3. [hacm. '85.] Comp, Embryol. ety of calcite, chiefly from Tecall, Mexico, used for Interior called in England. See geology. [< ONTO- H- -GENY.] Otl^tO-geH'c-slst.. decorations. Mexican iiiarblet.^ o'nyxsinar"ble, o"o-ll-tlf'er-ous, 0"o-Ii-tif'tr-u8, a. Producing or on-tog'ra-pliy, en-teg'ra-fi, n. A description of the n. A banded variety of marble, resembling onyx. Called abounding in oolite. [< oolite + L./^/tJ, bear.] also Egyptian alabaster, Gibi'ultar stone, and oriental ala- ool'ly, fl'll. [E. Ind.] MeUtl. A lump of steel, as Wootz. nature of beings. [< onto- -f- -grapuy.] " baster. Compare onychite. steel when removed from the crucible. — on"to-grapli'lc, a. o-nyx'is, o-nix'is, n. Pathol. 1. morbid curvature o-ol'o-gr, o-el'o-ii, n. The branch of ornithology that on^to-log^lc-al, en'to-loj'ic-al, o. Of or pertaining to A of the nails, as in hectic persons. 2. Ingrowing of the treats of eggs and birds during nidification. [«/o/(X/?Pfl/ principles, ou''- to-log'lej,— ontolugicRl proof'orarpinnPnt{7'A60/.), nails. [< Gr. onyx {onych-), nail.] -LOGY.]— o'^o-log'tc, o"o-log:'Io-al, a.— o"o- One. the metaphysical a priori argunu'nt designed to prove that oott a. loff'lc-al-ly, arf?'.— o-ol'o-gl«t, n. O'o, [Ilawaiian.] the real objective exisn^nce of (;<»d Is necessarily Involved o'o, n. A honey-eater, the yellow- oo'loiiff, fl'leng, n. A variety of cured tea darker than In the existence of the very Idea of God. tufted moho (Moho nobilis) of the Sandwich Islands, the green: widely known to commerce, and the kind on"lo-!ojj'ic-al-l>', on'to-lej'ic-al-i, adv. In the na- yielding the yellow feathers valued for oniament. generally used by' the Chinese themselves. 0-. ture of things; as a condition of being 00-, Derived from Greek don, egg: combining forms. Oolong 19 obtained in Fuhkien —a black tea with a green tea fla- on-lol'o-gfMiii, ©ntel'o-jizm, n. Theol. The doctrine — o'o-blast, «. The primitive germinal nucleus of an vor, named Black Dragon from a story that Su was struck with the of the immediate cognition or consciousness of God by ovum.— o"o-bIas'tic, a.— o"o-cyiii'bn, n. i-ujE, pl.\ fragrance of the leaf from a plant where a black snake was fonnd Spong. spicule of two meridional btmds -produced coiled. Williams Middle vol. ii, ch. 15, p. 48. Is. '83.] the human intellect. A by Kingdom the conjoined proral and pleural pteres of a ptcrocymba.— en-tol'o-ji, of real [< Chin, ooli/jiff, < 00, black, + Ivng, dragon.] on-tol'o-gy, n. PhUos. The science «.— n. Helmmtk. ooecl- o"o-cym'bate, o'o-cyst, An ooin, iim, n. [S. Afr.] Uncle, ooiiist. being. Spiecirically: (1) The science of being, or the Ab- um of a polyzoan.— a.— ». o"o-cys'tic, o-re'ci-iiin, o'^o-man'^ti-a, o-oiii'e-try, etc. See oo-. solute or First Cause, as the l»eing (to hv) or uTtimate prin [-CI-A, pl.'\ Helminth. A sac-like folding of the body-wall, oo'ml-ak, Q'mi-ak, n. Same as umiak. ciple underlying and explaining all other existences; the serving as a receptacle for tlie fertilized eggs, as In many O"o-iiiy-oe'tes, 0"o-mi-8!'ttzor-ce'tes, w. j)l. Bot. A ultimate philosophy. Compare philosophy. (2) The marine endoproctous polyzoans.— o-ie'ci-al, «.— o-og'- n. Boi. of or conjugation- ^oup of fungi producing sexual and non*sexual spores, science of the most general and fundamental princi[>le8 a»my, The union twogametes cells of different size and fonn. Compare isogamy.- o-og'- I. e., oospores and conidia. The sexual generation is by involved in all beings {to. bvTa), or existences constituting a-mous,a.— o"o-a:en'e-**i8, 7i. The origin and develop- means of female cells (oogonia) and male cells (anther- the universe. Same as metaphysic, 1. ment of the ovum, o-og'e-nyt.— o^^o-gc-net'ic, a.— idia). The antheridium fertilizes the oogonium, where- The name ontology seems to have b<^en first made cur- o"o-«lcE'a, n. Egg-glue.— n. [-xi-a, o'''o-ffo'ni-iim, upon the contents of the latter, the egg-cell or oosphere, rent In pliilosophy by Wolf. He divided metaphysics Into pi.] lint. The female reproductive organ In certain of the four parts — ontology, psychology, riitional cosmology, and lower cryptogams, being a large spherical cell or sue with- develops into a thick-walled resting-spore, the oospore. theology. It was cblotly with occupied abstract ln, flnt. w. LProv.Eng.] A mole. [< ONTO- 4- -LOGY,] on-tos'o-phy^. cyt.— o-oin'e-ter, n. A device for measuring eggs.— oont^, n. \E. Ind.] A camel. — on-toro-glHt* n. A student of or person versed In o-om'e-try, n. The measurenn-nt of eggs.- o"o-iiH*t'- nop, up, E. ir. (up, C), rt. [Scot.] To tie with thread; unite. ontology.— on-tol'o-glze* vi. To study ontology. ric, «.— o-oph'a-gy, n. The habit of eating eggs.— Oo'pak, H'pak, n. [Chin.] A variety of black tea from o'nust O'nus, n. [L.] A burden or responsibility; duty. o^'o-plior-nl 'gi -a, n. I'athol. Ovarian neuralgia. the Chinese province of Oopak or Hupek. Congress — o"o-phor-ec'to-iiiy, n. Surg. Same as ovarioto- had left this question nnanswered, . . . but cast the o'o-pliore, O'o-fOr, n. Same as oophyte. [< Gr. onus responsibiiity of my.— o'''o-plio-i*id'i-uin, n. Bot. Same as macrospo- and declaring what the existing taw was on Oophoros, egg-bearing. < don, egg, pherd, l>ear.] the courts. H. voN HoiJiT Conntitutional Hist. U. S. tr. hy La- banoium: a disused term — o^'o-pho-ri'tiH, ". rathol. + — o"o-»lior'lc, (7. lor, vol. iv. ch, 6, p. 292. [CAL. A co. 'R5.J Inflammathm of the ovaries.— n-opli^^o-ro-ep^i-lep'''- n. Pathol. Epilepsy proceeding o''o-plio-rid'i-uiii, n^^o-pho-rl'tis* etc. See oo-. — onuH proband!, the burden of proof; the responsi- »y, from ovarian disease.— O"o-pliy'ta, ri'o-fai'ta or-ft'ta,7i. jil. Bot. One of the bility of proving: gftnerallv resting upon the party (usually o-oph'^o-ro-ina'ni-a, n. Pithol. insanity due to ova- rian disease.— n. ovary, seven divisions into which the plant-kingdom is some- the plaintiff) holding the afflmiatlve side of an Issue. o-oph'n-ron« An o-oph'o- en'ward, rain:t>— o-opli'''o-rop'ath-yt n. I'ltthol. Any ovarian times divided, consisting of plants varying from a loosely on'ward, a. 1. Moving or leading forward disease, or o-a^'ri-np'ntli-yt.— o-OH'co-py, n. 1. The united colony of cells through filamentous forms to a ahead; tending to an improved state; advancing; pro- act of observing the process of development within an gressive; as, well-developed thallus, all characterized by the produc- an onward course. egg. 2. Divination by eggs.— o'o-Npi>riii, /*. 1, A fer- ti(m of an oogonium containing oospheres. It embraces In those conntries every onward step that science makes Implies tilized ovum. *i. Hot. Same as oospore.— »''n-Np4>r'iiio- 7 classes. [ oo- Gr. phyfon, plant.] a eonflkt. Draper Civil Policy of Am. ch. 3, p. 236. lH.^66.1 Hpore* n. Biol. A fecundated spore.— o'^o-Nper'ino- < + >i. — o^o-pliyt'Ic, a. 2t. Forward as to progress made; advanced.— on'- »po"rou«, a.— o'o-suliere, Hot. In alg«^ and fungi, the egg-cell prior to fertilization, consisting of a naked o'o-pliyto, O'o-fait, n. Bot. stage in the life-his- ward-nenst ». Advance or advancement: progress. The mass of protoplasm developed within an oogonium. After tory of the Bryophyta and Pteridophyta (mosses and on'U'ard, adv. 1. In the direction of progress; far- fertilization by an antherozold, or by gonoplasm from an ferns) during which the sexual organs are borne: one of ther in a course or tendency; toward the oojective point anthcridlnm. It becomes an oospore. See oosi*ohe. — o"o- the simplest examples of the alternation of generations. or desired end; in advance; forward; ahead; on. Hpo-rnn'gi-uiii, ". 1-(ji-a,;>/.1 Bot. One of the milloc- [< oo- Gr. phyton, plant. Then onward with a martyr's iieal; And wait thy sure reward. ular zooHporangla developed by certain pliaeosporous algcrived from (jreekw/yj', nail, a claw, onyx: o'^o-Mpor'ict.— o-OM'le-gite. n. Crust. A plate-like oo^rie, ti'ri. a. [Local. Scot.] 1, Shivering; cold; de- onycho*. f combining forms.— on"v-ehaux'ls, //. Pa- expansion of certain somites, fonnlng a receptacle for batch pressed In spirit, ti. Bleak; desolate, oo'ryj; ou'rieU thol. Morbid enlargement ()f any of the nails.— o-iiych'* Ing the eggs, as in ampblpods.— o-OM"lc-(fit'ie, /.] 1. An egg-cast^ i{. Bot. Ir o-o(4'co-py< o'o-Hperin, etc. See oo-.

aottL, Ann, ^sk; at, fAre^ accord; elfm^nt, $r = ov«r, eight, f = usage; tin, nuwhiue, | = r«new; obey, no; not, nor, at^m; full, rule; bot, bom; aisle; ;

ootruni 1931 opening oo^trniii, Q'trura. n. [E. lod.) Tbe soft, white. silky, and 2. Entom. & Boi. Having no luster; not shining: dull. place still open. (4) Not yet settled, adjusted, or closed; of the milkweed as. an open account. (5) Not of the nature of restriction or struiiK flt»er of a plant (DsemUi eztetmt) 3. Figuratively, not giving out light; unintelligible ; ob- AsctepifuUic^ie), In southern India; also, of private transaction; as, an open hid; an open market. (6) fainlly ( K^owlnic scure; as, an o/x/of/t' style. 4+. Dark; obscure. [F., < plant, o'traint* Dlsenjfaifed and ready for eniploynient; free to contract for the L. opticus, shady.] o-pake't. ooz, oozd. Ooze, etc. Phil. Soc. service; as. opi-n to an engagement. (7) Liable or exposed; Synonyms: see dark. subject; as, open to attack, theft, or robbery. Oz. r. [oozkd: oo'zino.] I. /. To emit or dis- ooze. — o-paque'ly, «Ility, or consideration; as, oven to choose; open to main- POE Tales. Gold Buff ] selvea. ROBERTSON Sermons second series, ser. xii, p. 335. iH. 70.] tain an alternative. (10) Liberally disposed; generous; through something or leak out im- II. (. 1. To flow ope, Op. rt. & ri. [.\rchalc & Poet.] To open. charitable, or showing liberality: a**, an open heart; an open interstices; perceptibly: pass slowly, as through pores or For rhetoric, he could not of>e purse. (U) Not frost-))ound; mild; as,&n open winter. filter: percolate; as. perspiration oozejt through the skin; His mouth, but out there flew a trope. 3. Print. Widely leaded or containing many break-lines; S. Butler Hudibnta pt. i, can. 1, 1. 81. wine ooze^ from its cask; bUxKl oozen from a wound. 2. fat: said of composed or printtni matter. 4. ^f>/s. (1) Not opet, n.& n. Open. To escape gradually; as. his courage ooz^d away. stopped by the finger: said of a string; also, produced o-pel'do-»eope, o-pai'do-scOp, n. An instrument con- ooze, n. 1. Slimy mud or moist, spongy soil; espe- by an unstopped string; as, an of)en tone. (2) Having sisting of a diapiiragiii and nnrror, and giving a visual cially, a slimy dep*>sit of calcareous matter found on the the top uncovered: said of an organ-pipe or set of such illustration of soiuKl-vibrations by means of a beam of ocea'n-lxmom and largely made up of the remains of pipes; as, the often diapason. An open pipe gives a light reflected upon a screen. Gr. o/w (o/>-), voice, 4- foraminifers. 3. A gentle flow; a^, iheoouoi a small [< fundamental tone an octave higher than the correspond- t'ntw, form. + -SCOPE.] slownmning spring. 3. LeatAertnaking. An infusion ing closed pij>e. (3) See open harmony, below. 5. ope'let, Op'let, n. A European sea-anemone (Anemonia or decoci ion of a tanniferous substance, such as oak-bark Phonol. (1) Uttered with vocal organs comparatively un- sulcata ). tan-vat liquor. [ < AS. tcd^t, juice, and wase, mud, which closed: said of both vowels and consonants. (2) Not o'pen.O'i>n, r. I. ^ 1. To set open so as to make pas- become similar ui ME.] oazet; oazet. followed or ended by a consonant: said of a vowel or sage possible; nnclose; as, to o/)ffi a door or a gate. O*o-zo'a, O'ozO'a, n. yV. Zooi. The Protozoa. [< oo- syllable. [< AS. ojien, akin to fp.] Now, juttt as the gates were opened to let in the men. I looked in + (ir. z&on^ animal.]— o^o-zo'an. a. A n. Synonyms: see bleak; bluff; candid; manifkst; after them. BUNYAN Works, Pilffrim'» Progress pt. i, eh. SO, p. fi'zi, Containing, consisting of, or covered notorious; overt. oo'zy, a. 1 . 170. [B. O. aco. 7«.] with soft mud; miry: wet and Ppongy; as, of»y eround. Phrases, etc. :— a'pensbreasl^ed, «. 1. Worn so 2. To unfasten (something enclosed) so as to obtain ac- as to be open; haviiiii the lapi-ls ft)lded back; as, an open- 2. Slowly l«aking; gently drippmg; as, an oozy flow. cess to its interior; unloc^k: as, to oi)€n a safe. 3. To breasted coat. '4, Opcd-hearted; frank.— o. coiiiinun-

enough . She waa a praiseworthr wnman thlnka Ihm jad^e. In tipHn remove the covering, wrapping, shell, or the like of, so ion. the principle of admitting to parliclpiuli»n In the her Q«rvoa«i«a«. and the tears that die waa oory with. of w expose contents; coniniunion all persons who have united with any Christian cb. r. *5l.] as to or remove the as. to o/mh a pack- Hawthurxk Houae qf Seven Oabtea 18. p. »1. fr. * church by profession of their faith: opposed to clo!*€ com- age or a box. 4. To spread out; expand; as, to ojtfn a Op-, pr^/lj: Same a^ ob*: assimilated form twfore n. munion. See COMMUNION.— o.«cut, a. Mining. Open to fan. 5. To render passable by removing hindrances: the day: •-pa'rale^. rt. To make dark or obscure; tiecloud; darken. said of aiulne-workluK. o.^eastt:.— o.sfloored* free from obstacles: as, to ojten a wa]r through ihe woods. Hospitable; o-pa'elle, o-pe'sait, n. Petrol. Small black opaque a. easily accessible.- o. d(»t (L'o-ewotk^, an 6. To cut into; make an opening into; as, to ojten an open space In the pattern to relieve the desf^ti of too great grains, often altention products, but too small to ne re- abscess. 7. To make free of access: make public; as, to sameneMH or wolldlty.- o.«eyed,fr. HnvInK the eyes oi)en; ferntl to any mineral species. [< L. opacu*^ shady.] ojien a garden or a park. 8. To make accessible as for characterized by open eyes; wary; watchful; amazed; as. In o-pac*'l-l)', o-pai»'l-ti, n. [-TIES. /^.] 1. The state or open-eyed wonder.— o. •front, «. Having a forehearth: trade, cultivation, or navigation; as, to often the t'ongo quality of being opaque; imjK-rf^-ft transmission of light; said of a blast-furnace.- o.ilianded, egin, as a business; as, to of an oarsman or his action.— o.ilinndedneNH, '<.— o. In order to apprei-iate tta weicht, we moal- AilfainMl OpoeUg to corres|Kmdence. chords whose notes arc sepaniteil by wide In- into two kiodx. namely, the oparity of whifteaMa and the opaeitg op«n afactory: o/^w a 10. Tomake harmony* -- --— -— tervals.- o. a ship's of bUckneM. BBKWsm Sewtom ch. 7, p. 97. [H. '31.] capacion»,or"more capacious; widen; enlarge; especially, ^-ji hawxe, -S —.jLt^Tjj hawse In which the cables do to make more receptive of ideas or sentmients; as, to - 3. That which Is opaque or Impervions to Il^t. [< L. g3 ^- Ti not cross each other.- o.* Often one's understanding. II. To impart freely the opOfUait)*^ < opaeuM^ shady.] headcdt, a. Bareheaded. knowUnlge of : reveal; disclose; as, to o/»fw one's heart to o-paVoua-^* a. Opaque, ••par'n-lart. o. I hedeilt.— o. i hearted. o'pali. O'pa, R. A lampriduid tlsh {iMmpri* gttttatuM) a friend. 12. To make known the particulars of; ex- gp -_ . .II. ShowinjT the thoutfhtsand ^ " Intentions with a compressed oviform UHly. long single dorsal and pound: as. he oitentH his plans; to oi>en a pasj*age of the ^ii plainlv; free from guile; frank; candid- unre- anal fins, and many-rared ventrals: noted for the bril- Scriptures. 1 3. To bring under discus4«ion, or to render decisi^m; served —o.«lieartedly,arfP. liancy of its cokMv. Called also kinqfigfL, Hng-of'tht* subject togiieryor as. to o/wn a question. 14. Open Harmony. Ii ea re ed neHM* Law. (1) To state ahe plaintiff's or defendant's case) In herrirtggy and mt^bA. o*>hearth, (2) To undo or recall (a judgment or order) so as to per- See procehs.- o. lioUHe, a house In whl(*ti inistiitted hos- resinous, variously col«r«l, mit its validity to be contested. pitality Is extended to all vlsltlnIons; luncnable dell. : y arc valu- — < I- wunniU. drewed in Cowacit fashion by the old inspector of to reason; candid; unreserved.— o.siiiindeilneNN, n. a)>I> I ( ui. Thev /:>it« and lueaaures, opened. SlENKlRWicz With Fire and omuulhed. ". I. Having the tnouth oitened; KHpitig, WiT- ..:l.fto(i!i\;- ~ -f/ Ir. by Curtln. ch. 13. p. lift. [L. B. * vo. 'W.l as In wonder or surprise; ifreedy; voracious, -i. Noisy; clamorous.- o. Mcore, a musical score In wlileb each part 3. To crack, rupture, or yawn; as, the earth Ofjenett; the »UI"^ Is written on a separate line.— u. whop. In printing and li begin; started; as, Aj« seam opened. 4. To be commence: kindred trades, a shop where the union price Is paid, but , >'• van t, |... !. iM ..|...1 "f to f>/>^;i promptly; the market op^H^rf strong. 5. To be- where the workmen are not all union men.— n.isteek, n. r OEM h.i ) h >;u |.:. I. in i I U ..t..i I. Holilr i^n to bay or bark on finding the scent of game; as, the IScol.) 0|KMiwork stiiehlng.- o'pen-tide". n. \ Local,

prr< I.HI -..;.. I, I .- - up;! I . hdiind.f Often. 6. To develop or to Ixiconie capacious or Eng.J 1. Sprltigllnie. 'Z, The thue din'ctly following an- ii I ...'. " / '.•/ receptive, as the mind or character; as, the boy's mind the grain-harvest, when the C4nnn)on tIeUlsare open for cat- rophtihf, <((-. tle, oue'lide^t.— o.ftiinber, a. Having il»> under side o/tenn. 7. To lM*come more widely and plainly visible; Tha opal . . . when pore and oacot la IU nativa roek, . . . pr»- treated In an ornamental manner, so as to form a celling: as, valley •mta the moat lorelf eoloara that can be ••• Is tha world, eacept expand to the view; the oftens grandly. 8. To said of a roof, as of a church or the like. thnw of ckmda. KcsaiN Led. "N AH leat. vH, p. OL lo. A.) become unfolded, as the bud of a flower. 9. To be or o'pen, n. Any wide space unenclosed or not surrounded or V. cpaU^ < L. opalus. < Or. opaUioty opal.] — ct'pali act as a door or opening for a view for ingress and by barriers or woods: usually with the definite article; west; L'; -bs'cimo.] To dis- epeciflertions. 12. Theat. To ble of belnc uni(X>sed. set open, or unfastened. a uniforu) niMtiiim. from which often results a play of begin a season or tour: as, where do you ofienf [< AS. o'pen-blll", A'pn-bil', rt. An African or Asiatic anas- milkv or smoky tints* as seen in the opal. openian, < open, open.] Uim\ueM\.ciT)x.iAnastotnusos- o''pal-eM'rent,0'pal-«a'ent,a. [P.] Possessing an opal- — f • apea a Jaekipot* In the game of poker, to Initi- citans). Called also claftiter- ate play upon recelvlnK in the d(«l a hand cuntalnliiK a i>alr iiH> play of pearly colors; as,ano||N>Mc«n/gemorniineral. hW, shelUeater, and snelX* of jacks or higher.— loo. the ball* to he the hrst tn dance if/is. o'pen-beak^ Blormr contf awapk nmmA Ih* DMMOrtsln^ hctweaa which, how- at a ball: bence, to b^'Klnany Bysteiimtlc and energetic the opatemvnt air. ever, iUnmhwfwi rUs«a —«Mad to iwioi tn the work, as a Iwttle.— |o o. the moalh, to s|H-Hk.— to o. o'peiid,/v>- <>i>ened. Ph. S. TmALi, Homrw of Exrre(m ck. &, f. a, [a. *71.| O'pn-er. n. One op* to discover: explore; as. to open up a new country. o'peii-er, | o^pal-OKque'J. o'pen* a. 1. Easy of or afforuing approach, view, pas- who or that which oi)ene. Cpa-iriia, r/pa-kii'Da or -It'na, n, Protot. 1, A sage, or access because of the abs<'iKe of soniethin^ that (1) An instmment foroixjn- gle porcelain; milky glass, not* cloaed; unsinpptMl; as, an open highway; an open wound: space, as within barriers or iKmndaries; a hole, passage, an opeti bottle; an open door. (3i \*of protected against eaxt uorrelatn$. or gap; as, an ofteyting between walls. Specifically: (1) stonns or the Incli-tnenry of the weather; uriBheltered: ex- 0*pa-Hn'i-dI -de, n. td. ProftK. tract in a forest where trees are lacking or O^pa-lln'l-dir. or A posed; as, an opfu roa^lstead. (4) Nut enclottccl or covered (U. S.J A fatiiily of holotricbons infusorians without a mouth, over; subject to Interior view or to approach; ajj, an open Ihinlv scattered; as, anoak-m^wiw!/. (2) Arch. An aper- evenly ciliated, and endoparasiUc. [< Opalina.] boat; an op«» sewer. ture in a wall, es|X'Cially one for the admission of light or - o'^pa-lln'ld, n.— o-pal'l-nold, a. I was . . . drlvinjins in an open carriage . • towards my own air. (3) [Local. V. S.] The widening of a crevice at the o'Dal-lz^fO^pal-oia, v<. [-izkd; -i'zino.] To replace the bonae. HOLHESI Our Hundred Day ch. fl, p. 218. [H. M. a co.] surface: amlningterm. 3. The first part, steps, or stage, tiNuu' of (an organic stmctnre) with silica so as to cause (5) Not pocked or rolled up; not f(!Wed up and put away as of a i>eri(Ml, an act, or a process; a beginning; espe- it to api>ear like opal; convert into opal. o'pal*lac$. hence, not private; unsealeil: as, goods lying open- an open cially, a formal beginning; prelmle; as, nt Uw oftening of o'pal-old.n'pnl-oid,a. Resembling opal; having trans- letter; an open order, (ti) Fully spread or C4)nipletely de- the day; the o/)€rnng for the plaintiff. See opkn, rt., 14. veloped; expanded; unfolded: as, an open flower. lucent whiti-miw: an. (tjtalOiti glass. [< opal + -oiD.] The opening of the Iliad has bet^n much admired by both an- o'pal-o-lype", n'lMilo-talp" (o-palS VK.), n. Phot. A The Qoiselem buttertlies Ihotifch on the ground, cient and modem critics, for its boldly hurryinif the reader into Continue Btlll to wavts tneir o/ten fanb phot/>^aphir |)osittve picture (m milky or opal glass: of the very midst of affairs. (fold. Carixis 1. «1. Powder'd with WiicoX Summer Soon ANTHON Homer^s Hind bk. i, p. 13ft, note. [H. '55.] ptTiiliar wiftness and richness. t< opal + -ttpk.I (7) Presenting holes or perforations, as a knit, woven, or o-paqiie', o-p^'. rt. [o-PAqtniD'; o-PAqu'iNo.J To Specifically: (1) In chess, checkers, etc., a 8i>eclfic mode needlewrouKht texture. (8) Not surrounded by any deter- rendiT im[N'rvious to light. of Iwclnniiig a game; the series of opening moves, usu- minate llniitt*; unbounded; as, the open sea; an open prairie. not transiwrent ally the result of anal vhIh and experience. o•paque^ a. 1. Impendoos to light; 2. Ready to receive or bt; affected by that which ap- or transparent Openlntft* lx-»r sped'tlc names, as the kniglit*s open- transliirent; In a loose sense, imperfertly proaches or is sent. (11 In readiness for customers, appli- and kingN bUhou'H openlns. In chess, and tbe or trarir>liiri;nt: sakl also In phrslcs of b

! play a laiy clerk in the opening. 2. A method of exercising or applying force; a mode of op"e-ret'ta, ep"g-ret'a, n. 1. A humorous one-act J. K. Jeromk Om Mh" 5(00^ anrf OiT eh. 10. p. 137. [U P.] action; as, by this of>eration power is gained. 3. A sin- opera with dialogue spoken or in recitativo secoo. 2, 4. An opportunity for action, eepecialiy in business; a gle specific act or transaction, especially in the stock A modern humorous play in dialogue and music, of vacant field; ti*:, afine ofietdng for a Buitable man. market; as, by this 0))eration I made ten thousand dol- more than one act. [It., dim. of opera; see opera.] see n.\ breach; Synonyms: beginning, entrance; lars. 4, A course or series of acts to effect a certain pur- op'er-ose", ep'gr-os', a. [Archaic] Wrought with or at- HOLE; OPlN_>RTlSITy. pose; process; as, military o])erations. 5. The state of tended by great labor or unusual pains; laborious. [< L o'pen-Iy, O'pn-Ii, adv. In an open manner; freely; operosns, opera, work.] being m action; as, the bank went into operation last < op'er-oust. publicly; unreservedly. — op^er-ose^Iy, op'er-ou»-lyt, adv.— week; the machinery is in oj)eration. 6. Surg. Tiie op'er- openly condemn the gods for the actions ose"ne8s, n. Laborious ness. op''er-os'i-tyt. Etuipide* ventures to application of instruments and manual manipulations for attributed to them. op"er-ta'ne-oust, a. Hidden from view; private. removing diseaseti parts or correcting abnormal condi- B. F. Westcott Religious Thought essay iii, p. 105. [hach. '91.] o-pe'sl-a, o-pl'shi-a or -pe'si-a, n. Helminth. An aper- tions; as, the oj)eration for calculus. Operations in sur- o'ppuiuiiud'^edf o.imoulbed. etc. Sccopen. ture in the front wall of the zooecium of a polyzoon. [< gery frequently bear the name of their originator, o'pen-nesM, o'jjn-nes, ;*. The quality or condition of and Gr. ope, opening.] being open; specifically, frankness; publicity. indicate a particular method of treatment in a special — u-pe^'Fti-alt a.— o-pe'si-u-la, n. Helminth. A sec- disease; as, Schroeder^s operation. Math. The act ondary small ojiesia. Perfect openness is the only principle on which a free constitu- 7. op'tuid", tion can be maintained and a tree people governed. of making a change in the value or form of a quantity; ope'tiae"t n. Same as opextidk. C. D. YONGE Constitutional Hist. Eng. ch. 1, p. 28. [H. '82.] also, a symbol by which such an act is indicated. [OF., opli-, ] Derived from Greek ophis, serpent: combi- o'penises'^a-nie, O'pn-ses'a-me, «. A magical conju- < L. o}i€ratio{n-), < opu^ {oj}er-), work.] ophl-, i ning forms.- Oph"i-a8''lra, «. jd. Echin. ration for opening close/«w/€a°.— Oph"ich-thy'i-dfe, n. pi. entrance. fluence, performance, procedure, result. Operation Is ac- opliio-. J Ich. A family of enchelycephalous eels, tion considered with reference to the thing acted upon; as, especially those with labial nostrils. Oufa-icli'tliys, ?i. Their letters of introdnction were an *opeH sesame.' Carlos the operation of a medicine. Performance and execution (t.g.)--opli^'icli-tliy'ifl. H.— opli-_' -icii'tliy-oid. MaKTVN IVendeU t^illips bk. ii. ch. 1, p. 128. [r. & w. '90.] denote intelligent ^Qtloxi,performance accomplishing the Oii>pli"i-der'i-€lie, )i. pi. Entoni. .V fanilly of noctuld "" which, in [From the words Ofien sesame," by the story will of the actor, e^-ecution often the will of another; we moth.s. Oi>h-id'e-i'eii(« /(. (t. — * g.) oiih^i-aer'ifU a. & n. of the Forty Thieves," in the "Arabian Nights' Enter- speak of xhc perf'ormunce of a duty, the execution of a sen- — »pli-ial'i-dtet n. pi. Ich. An Indo= cast: applied to operations in mining or quarrying. II. op'er-a-ttv(e, ep'ijr-a-tiv, a. 1. Exerting power or African fandlyof acantliopteryglan fishes with a long body, force; active. scaly snakelike head, long spineless dorsal and anal fln.s.and ;/. Any product of art or handicraft with numerous mostly subbrachIal6=rayedventrals;walkinK^nsli('H. <>i>b''- openings through the material wrought with or upon. It is in early life that this UDConsciouB imitation is most opera- i-o-c(>pli'a-liiH, n. (t. g.) — oph"i-<»'''re|th-iil'id, n. tive. Hopkins Law of Love pt. ii, class 1, div. 3, eh. 2, p. 157. [s.| op'e-ra, ep'g-ra (op'ra, S.\ n. 1. The musical form of — «pli"i-«-cepli'a-loid, «.— Opli''i-o-(-oinM-d;e, n. drama, compf>8ed of airs, recitatives, choruses, etc., with 2. Working or acting efficiently; producing the proper pi. Echin. A family of ophiurans witli oral and dental accompan intent of orchestra, scenery, and acting; as, or desired result; effective; efficacious; as, an operative papillae. Opli^'i-oc^o-ina, n. (t. g.) — oph'^i-o-eiiui'- grand opera; comic opera; the Italian pr German opera. dose of medicine. id* « — opli"i-oe'o-inoid, «.— Opli"i-o-dei''ml-dae, n. pi. Echin. A family of ophiurans with oral papillae nu- The text, or libretto, may be entirely In verBe, or partly In For light is operative as well as beautiful, and by working upon merous and dental absent. verse and partly In prose. It may be all set to music, or, the spirits, affects the heart as well as pleases the eye. Opb'^i-o-der'ma, n. (I. g.) — opir'i-o-der'iiiid, ^f.— opli^^i as In comic opera, part may be spoken. See phrases. R. South Semnons vol. ii. ser. xxxi, p. 1&*. [h. A H. '67.] -o-dei-'iiioid, a.— oph^i -og'ra - pliy, n. The description of serpents. The libretto of the opera is a peculiar kind of drama entirely in 3. Surg. Connected with or relating to operations; as, — opli'''i-ol'a-tei', n. A s(']-ncnt= worshiper; one who verse and set to music, or partly in verse set to music and pai-tly oj)erative surgery. [< L. oj}eraius, pp. of opejvr, work, practises ophiolatry.— opIi'^i-ora-trouN, a. Addicted in prose to be spoken. A. HENNEQl'lN Art of Playwriting ch. 8, {oper-), work.] or pertaining to serpent= p. 49. [H. M. A CO. "90.] < opus worship.— opli"'i-ol'a-tr>'» n. Serpent=worshIp.— Opli"i-o-le-pid'i.dse, n. pi. Echin. The capital fact of this period was the introduction and ^reat —op'er-a-tIv(e-iy, arfi\— op'er-a-tlv(e-ness, A family of ophiurans with 3 to tj oral and no dental papillae. popularity of the Italian opera, Opet'os on the Italian model tirst n. The quality of being operative.-— op"er-a-tiv'l- OpIi'^i-ol'e-piM. n. (t. g.) — oph"i-o''le-pid'id, 7i.— appeared in Eiigtand in 1705. ty, n. The condition or fact of being operative, efficient, opk'''i-o-lep'i-doid, a.— opli'''i-o-lfig'ic, oph"i-o- Lecky Eng. in the Eighteenth Cent. vol. i,ch. 4, p. 576. [A. '88.] or in working order; efficiency. log'ic-al, «. Of or pertaining to opliiology.— opli"i- 2. A particular musical drama, or its music or libretto. op'er-a-tlvoe, n. A person who is employed as a work- ol'o-Kist, n. One versed in ophiology. opii'''i-! Divination by means of serpents.— Oph''- It . . takes . at least one peasant's or one operative's product i-o-nior'plia, sung throughout and accompanied by a full orchestra.— o. to sustain one soldier. »:«/. Herp. The Ceeciliidse as an order. IF. I. a farcical comic operetta.- [It.], an Oph"i-o-iiior'plitet.— npli'i-o-inorplj, bonfle o. bufl'a E. ATKINSON in Century Magazine Feb., '87, p. 620. «.— opli^'i- Italian comic opera with the dialogue In recitativo secco.— o-iiioi'^pliic, a. 1. Serpent=like. Of orpertainingto Synonyms: see artisan. 2. op'e-rascloak'^t ». A stylish and usually showy cloak the Ophioniorpha. ouli''i-o-iiioi*'phoimt.— Oph'''i-0- op'er-a"tor, ep'sr-e'tgr, n. operates; worn by women over full dress, as at the opera and at social 1. One who inyx'i-diB, H. /?/. Echin. A family of ophiurans with 3 specifically, fiarries.— o. coinique [F.], an opera In which the dla- one who works with or controls some ma- oral papilla; like teeth. Opli'^i-o-myx'a, n. (t. g.)~- ogue 18 spoken and the story ends liappily.— o.sdaiicer, chine or scientific apparatus; any skilled worker. oph^^i-o-iiiyx'id, «.— opfi"i-o-iiiyx'oi€l, a— opli"- w. A ballet-dancer at the opera.— o.s«{irl», n. A hothouse The longer the time necessary for learning an operation, the i-opb'a-ifoiiM, «. Devouring or feeding on serpents.— plant; dancing-glrls.- o.sfflass, }i. A binocular telescope higher must be the wages of the operator for the remainder of his ouh'^^i-opli'a-giis, n. Herp. An elapold snake, the ham-

life. adry'id ( OpliiophagiiH of small size for magnifying a large field of view a few Wayland and Chapin Polit. Econ. ch. 6, p. 61. [sh. & co.] e^«i:J«).— Oph"i-o-j*au'ri- "" " • times, without inversion: pi. The ^l»iy?/tii7>as«o/rfe«' as a suborder." " used chiefly by spectators In the 2. Surg. One who takes the leading part in or performs Pi- Opli''i-o-<«au'- theater. Each half consists of a convergent object-glass, rU: Oph"i-sau'ri-aJ.— oph'M-o-sau'ri-aii, «. & n. a surgical operation ; as, Dr. the which forms an inverted real Image, and a divergent eye- A was operator^ with ~Opli"i-o-«au'ri-dae, n. pi. Herp. The Ophifiauri- Dr. as assistant. 3. broker piece, which refnverts It as If from an erect virtual Image. B A who acts for others dse.lie. Opli''i-o-saii'ra8, «. (t. g.)e.) — opli'i-o-naur,opli'i-o* «.- o.::fflasNesi:.— o.:hat* n. A tall hat extended by springs in trading in securities or commodities in which there are Oph'''i-o-trieli'i-flief(lph'''i-o-trieli'i-flief n. pi. Echin. A familyfam: of ophi- and capable of being collapsed into an approximately flat organized speculative dealings: specifically applied, in uransjrans with dental but no oral papilla?. Opb'iOpb'i-o-thrix, ., ,» „ > ^k..i.//i ,. ...:_*! .!__* furni.- o.shouse, n. A theater specially adapted for the the United States, to individuals or firms engaged in coal- n. (t. g.) Opli"i-o-trie'i- [Perhaps < Gr. ophis, I. n. workroom; II. A working man; one wno acts or operates. op'er-a-to"ryt, A laboratory. serpent, -^ heloa. marsh.] op'er-a-tricet» n. A female operator. The Supreme Fair sole operant; in whose si^ht — opli"e-li'ld, H.~o-plie'lI-old, a. o-pei*'cle, o-pgr'cl, C. (O'psr-cl, H'.), n. An operculum. All things are pure. COLERiiKiE Religious MusingsBt. 3. oplk'l-cleide, efi-claia, n. A brass musical %vind- o-per'cii-Iar, o-per'kin-lar, a. 1. Of or pertaining to r< L. opera tt(.t-)s, ppr. of operor; see operative.] instrument producing fundamental tones and an operculum; serving as a lid; &.^, fin opercular hoMQ. ^ op'er-a"la-bl(e, ep'er-e'ta-bl, That can be oper- resembling a cornet, but having a greater num- a. 2. Having an operculum; operculate. ated or worked; operable. ber of finger-levers (usually II), and a compass o-per'cu-iar, n. An opercular bone; the operculum. op'er-ate,ep'er-6t, i'. [-a'ted; -a'tino.] 1. t. 1. To of over three octaves. [< ophi- + Gr. Ideis 0-per'"cu-la'ta, o-per'Kiu-le'taoro-per'cu-lg'ta,7i. p^. put in action and supervise the working of; as, to operate {kleid-\ key.] — opl»'l-eIeI'''dl8t,n. One Conch. A section of any division of testaceous gastro- , a machine. 2. To conduct or manage the affairs of; who plays the ophicleide. pods with an operculum, as contrasted with another sec- superintend; as, to operate a mining business or a rail- O-pIiid'I-a, o-fid'i-a, ??. jd. Herp. division tion without one, as of Thalassophila, 7'ectiiyranchiata^ A road. 3. To effect by some course of action or proce- of reptiles, especially an order of Sgua/nata or PeltocochZides; especially, Phane- dure; accomplish. with mandibular rami connected only by liga- ropneumona as a section of Pulmmia- If oar country be delivered what does it signify whether those ment and no pectoral arch; serpents; snakes. ta. L. who operate her salvation federal democratic [ < opercvlatus, pp. of ojyercvlo, wear a or cloak ) [< Gr. ophidian, dim. of ophis, serpent.] — o- Morris in Roosevelt's Morris 363. '88.] cover with a lid, < oj^i'cvlum; see G. eh. 13, p. [H. M. & CO. pliid'i-an. I. a. Of or pertaining to OpAidfa OPERCULUM.]— o-peKcu-li-form", a. II. i. 1 . To exert power or force, physical or mechan- or serpents. o-pliidM-oii!!«t. II, h- One of Having the form of an operculiun.— ical; do work; act; especially, to act continuously: with the 0/jA2d*«- — o-phid"i-a'na, n. pi. Anec- o-per"cu-lig'e-nous, a. Producing i«, on, or vpon before dotes of serpents; snake-stories. — o-pliid"i- the object. an operculum, as the metapodiuni In gas- a'l'i-aiii, 71. I-ki-a or -ri-ums, pi.] place ^—, .1- The body operates very powerfully upon the soul both for ffood A tropods.— o-per"cu-Iig'er-OHS, a.^ where sei-pcnts are kept in captivity. cieuie. and evil. BoNAR Night of Weeping ch. 6, p. 67. [c. A BR08.^49.] Having an operculum. o-»er"cu-lif'- ^^il^rculum of a Opli^l-dl'l-da*, ©f"i-dQi'i-ai or -dt'i-de, «. 2>l- ^cA. A 2. To effect any result; have agency; act: used abso- er-oust. Pyxis of Portu- 1*<^=*- family of fishes, especially Ophidioidea, having ventral lutely; as, the work o^rateU for good. 3. To bring o-j>ei''cu-Inte. o-per'klLi-lct or -let, a. I , Havlnganoperciiluni. '2. Pciialnlng a, the operculum fins between the rami of the lower jaw and resembling a about or effect a (speciiled) result; as, familiarity with to ihi; OperCUlata. [y^'/v///(//^;,v- see in position; 6, the pair of bifid barbels; sand-cusks. [< Ophidium.] crime operates to produce criminals. 4. To work or act OperOULATA.] 0-per'cU-lll"leai. operculum falling off — opli"l-di'id, «.— opli-Id'i-oid, a. & n. noticeaoiy and effectively; produce the proper or intend- disclosing the o^per'cu-lum, o-pcr'kiu-lum o?-'^"'* Opli-ld"I-oi'de-a, ef-id"i-ei'dg-a, n. pi. Ich. A super- ed effect; as, the medicine begins to operate. 5. To o-per'cu-lum, n. [-la, id.} Biol. A family of teleocephalous fishes with ventrals jugular at evacuate the bowels. 6. To deal in railway or other se- lid, cover, or lid=like part or organ, as of the orifice of the chin, or absent, long spineless dorsal and anal fins, curities or in grain or other products in which there are the capsule in mosses, of certain capsules (as a pyxis) and wide branchial apertures. [< Ophidium -|- -oid.] organized speculative transactions; as, to ojyerate in in flowering plants, of the hair-follicles, etc. Specific- — opli-ld"l-ol'de-an, «. & n. Heading, or m wheat, or in cotton. ally: (1) Za>l. (a) Conch. A homy or shelly plate secre- Opli-id^i-uni, ef-id'i-mn, n. 1. A genus typical of A broker, to operate in the exchange, must have the power of ted, by the metapodium and 8er\'ing to close the Ophidlid'ee. 2. [o-] A fish of this genus. [cover. Pteridophyta, in whicli the jilant-body consists ract. of stem [< L. operaius; see operative.] Crust. The plate that — op'er-a''lin(csta"ble, ic) and leat, usually from a fleshy root, and spiked or pan- n. A table, of various fonns, covers the abdominal limbs Bometlmea like a chair with adju8ta»)Ie parts, icled, naked, exannulate sporangia. It embraces 3 ^n- on which per- Opercula (of Mollusks), sons who are to Ite operated upon surgically are placed. in xiphosurans, ^ the era and about 25 species. Ophioglossum, the principal king-crab, consisting of 1. A periwinkle (littorinid), show- op"e-rat'Ic, ep"i;-rat'ic, a. Pertaining to, of the nature genus, is known as adder»tongue. [< ophio- -f- Gr. ing the position of the operculum of, or in the style of the opera; the modified 7th pair of gld^sa, tongue.] opli"I-o-glos-sa'oeou8, a. as, operatic music, op"- when closing the aperture. Com- — cephalothoracic limbs, {d) opli''i-og'ra-pny, etc. e-rat'le-al*.— op"e-rat'Ic-al-ly, adv. pare illus. under Gasteropoda. opli"i-ol'a-lry, See ophi-. labrum or O'fizm, op^er-a'tloiB, op'yr-e'shun, n. 1. The act or process Entom. The _ Forms^ of onercula: a, un^ii- o^pUtsm, n. Worship of the serpent as a sym- of operating; the exertion or action of any form ot power epipharynx of certain dip- form orclaw-sfiaped'itiaped; b, imbncr bol of tlie male generative principle: allied to phaltisin. ters. (e) Cr^uat. cox- ted; c, multispiral; d, paucispiral; Gr. ser|>ent.] or energy, physical, mechanical, mental, or moral: as, the A [< ophU, «• articulated, operation of nature's laws; the operations of the mind. ocerite of the external an- o'pliltc, O'fait, ^. ir. Wr., or ef'ait. C. E. I. (xiii), a. tennai in a modified form. (2) Anat. The part of the Pertaining to a serpent. Gr. ophites; seeoPHITE^ While the laws of industry are not to be set aside, fresh condi- [< /*.] tions are to be constantly provided for their fair and favorable op- frontal lobe of tlie brain that covers the island of Reil. o'phlteS n. 1. Min€7'a/. A variety of marble colored eratifm. J, Bascom Sociology ch. fl, p. 252. [g. p. p.] [L., lid, , cover.] o-per'cle$; o-per'cule}. green by serpentine. Called also vei'd antique, o^'plii-

Bofa, firm, gek; at, fare, Record; e%m«nt, §r = over, ^ight, f = usage; tin, machine^ % = r«iew; obey, no; net, nor, atom; full, rfile; but, bwrn; aleie; 1 ;

Ophite 1233 opium

cal'cite^. 2. Petrol. A variety of altered diabase of o'pi-aue, O'pl-en, H. Chem. SameasxARCOTiN. ['- n. pi. Herp. suborder uobnincheil anus. Oph^i-u'ri- o-pif'er-ouB*, '/. BrlnKine relief or assistance. li-a, A of dinosaurfans with pubic bones da^. — oph'^i-u're-Hiif c & n. o'pl-ficet, ". Workmanfihip. directed forward, brain-case completely ossitled, ali- — opli'^i-u'rid, n. An ophluran. o-.pif'|-cer+, «. A worker; workman, o'pi-rext. sphenoids, and no eplpterygolds.— o-pis"tlio-ctt''li-an. I. a. 1, Oplstlioca-lous. Of orpertaining lo the 0;iJi>i. — Oph'M-D^ri-dte. n. pi. Echin. O-pll^I-o'nea, o-piri-O'niz or -nes. ti. ju. Arach. The 'i. thocielia. II, n. One of the Opi>itkoaelui.~ O'Vin'^tUo- A faniilv of Ophiuroulea, rarluusly Pttalangidea. [< L. opilio, shepherd, < orU, sheep.] limited, Kenerally Including all the coe'lous, n. Concave behind, as a vertebral centrum; con- — o-pil'i-o-nln(e, a. & n. Ophiurete, sometimes restricted to vexo-concave; oplsthoctt'lian. — 0-pi8"tlio-coin' i-dte, o-piin€»'t, -coiii"i-for'iiie«. )i. }>!. Ornilh. de-a;. — opb^l-n'ri-ald* a. & «. — oph^i-u'rold, II. i. To have an opinion; conjecture. F.ophier^ [< The Opisihfjcotnitiae as an order.— op''is-tlioc'o-niin(e, oph'^i-u-roi'de-an, n. ft n. L. opinor, think.] < a. Of or pertainingto the Opi^thocojnidae. op'^iM-lhoe'- opn'ry-ou. of'ri-en, n. A craniometrical point. See — «- Capable of being I '• o-pl'na»bl(e, opined.— o*p o-piH^'tlio-cy-pho'sifii, ''. Piithol. Gr. brow.j o-moUKi.— Amur- CKAMOMKTKV. [< ofihryg, nant, n. [Rare.] One who forms or maintains an opinion. bid curvature of the extremities of the spine l)ackward, * n. opbtlialin-. I>erived from Greek ophtheUmm^ eye: — op''i-na'llon+, The act of forming an opinion; a making it convex toward the front.—op''it4-tliod''o-niop*, ophllialiiio*. (combining forms.— oph'^thal-nial'- conjecture.— o-pln'a-llvet, a. Fixed In one's oplnffms; u. Oi: ArcfiPol. A rear chamber or ireawurv at the hack conceited; arfr.— gi-a* /'. pi- J^ithol. Neuralgic pain of toe eye; optic neu- opinionated.— o-pin'a-tive-lyt, op'i- of the cella In some temples. See illus. vniook8 It Is used In the sense given above. From about 1881 «. Opinionated; MeiL Same as ophthaliiologist.— oph*thal^nile, n. o-pin^l-am'tert. I. ilxed In one's opin- It was generally held to mean not a rear chamber, but the CruaL One of the movable stalks on which the eyes are ions. o-pin'^UaM'troaH^t o-piii''i-R'tre+. II. ". Inner rear portico (eplnaos or postlcum) corresponding to borne In stalk'^jed or tMMlophtltalmoos crastaceans, as An opinionated or conceited person.— o-pln''i-n»'tre- the Inner front portico or pronaos Inmost peripteral teni- lyt, H. Olwttlnacy In ht>ldlng oplnicms; opinlonatedness. craba and lobsters.— oph'^thal-niii'lct a.—•ph'thal- files. The best arcln'ologlcal opinion now again supports il'tia« » PUhol. Innaromatlon of the eye. Including the o-pin^i-at'ri-iytt o-pln"i-at'ryt, he older sense. nu^'lH-lhod'o-niuHt.— o-piH'tho- uuUT and Internal siructarea.- aph-thafni*-blen'^- o-pin'i*ate^. ri. To hold opinions perslstentlv. dont, «. Having only nack teeth.— o-pi(*"lho-gn»'trie, o-pln'l»a'^ted+,rt. nwrarhr'a or -rhs^a, n. Pathol. Purulent ophthalmia. — Opinionated.—o-pln'i"a-tlve+, (t. Situated bt-hind the stomach.- O-piH^'tho-gloN'MH, — oph-(hal''Nia-car'^cl-B9'aia9 n. Ptthot. Cancer of *i. 1. (tplnlonated. '.i, IJelng a matter of opinion, not u. pi. Herp. A division of anurous amphibians with the the eye.— o»|i-tlial'ni*-«ele« n. I^Uhoi. Protrusion of knowledge.— o*pin'i-a-tive-lyt,aWr.— o.pin'i-a- hind part of the tongue free, as in fn)gs, toads, etc.— o- opinionated of the eyfhali beyond the socket, due to morbkl conditions tlTe*ne«aT, n.— o-pin'i-a^tort, n. An pIs'^tho-gloN^Hnl, '/. 1. Having the hind part free, as (if the- inner stmctures. Called also AMSdotr's diseoM.— person. the tongue In (/pixthoglomu. '2, Of or pertaining to the oph-ihal'^ma-dl'^aHillMi^-ter, n. An Instrument o-pin'i*caa« o-pln'l-cos. n. Her. A fictitious heraldic ani- fJvinthnqioNka. o-piH'''iho-gloN'Natei.— O-piN'^tho- fur adjusting the optic axes of lenaea to the ajcls of vision. mal having an eagle's bead, neck, and wings, a lion's bodv, Kiyph'i-a, n. pi. Herp. A division of snakes with pos- -apli-ihal'<'ma«dyn'l«a« n. Puhol. NeuraJgla or and a earners tall: the crest of the Company of Barber- teriorlerltir maxillary teeth grooved. Op''^iH-tliog'ly-pha1:.Op''^iH-tliog'ly-ph'a1:. surgeons of London. {Proh. < L. opinor. think.] rlieumatlc pain of the eye: frontal neanUgla,— aph^bal- — o-pia'tho-glypli, '/. o-piN''tiif»-glypli'le, «.— O- Oapin'loatt rt. To think; conjecture; opine. mog'ra-phy, h. A scientific descriptlun of the eye.— plA^thog-nnlb'i-dtP,, _ ». pi. Ich. A Tropicallan.... family oph-ihal'^nia-nel^a-iio'ma. n. Pithftt. Black can- O-pln^on, o-pin'yun, n. I . A conclusion or judgment of* aeantliopt''r\glan«aeantliopt''rjglan« withan antrorsifonn bodv. long single ' ...... <-i-r of thr fvchall; black degeneration of thu substance of held with conddence, but falling short of positive knowl- dorsal,»rsal, oblong anal, and advanced perfect ventrals. Op'*- Ih4f<-ye: iiii>lanuels.— aph'^thal«i•iuoin'r*ler« Optic*, edge: ruiging from matters of mere conjecture up to i-llioK'iiH-ihuFt. ". (t. g.) — o-piH''thoir-nnth'ifi, n. Instrument 1. An strong probability-; also, belief in general basetl on such op^it-k-thog'na-thoid, n. & u.— op''^iH-tling'nn- for finding iIh* true '/. conclusions; conclusion thouH, Cr*iniom. Having a Jaw that siopes baclTward: at especioUy, a or view resting on distance which saiduf a skull, and opposed to prognathous.—^ Op'^iN-llio- inadequate reasons, or on sentiment ratlier than cm reason an object should iron"e-n'ln. /*. pi. Entom. A section of trachcaie articu- as, Ih! viewed \yy each an opinion favorable to the subcess of an enttTprise; a lates wit li the generative organs at the hinder end i>f the '•ye. *Z, An instru- mere opinion. twdy. !iw in hexapud Insects.— op'^lH-thn-gon'c-ate, a. ment iuT iiit-iiAiir- Fifty of the beat men among na are likelv to have fiftv opinions — Op"i»-iho'iiii, n.pl. Ich. An order of teleost ttslies, Ing t on the merila of EUiabeth or<>omwell. Froudk Short Studte», especially Phi/noclitti with scapular arch free from the of I r R^irtmntative Men tn fint aeries, p. M7. [s. TS.J skull, maxlllarles distinct, and dorsal spines, as Masui- th(M r cemhelidae. - ».— 2. Speciflcally: (1) An esUmatt' of the excellence or np'iH-lhome, op^'is-cho'mouH, « as (..i .,,. u. .• r- ~-Op"iN-f h«ni'i-die, n. pi. lithninth. family of valne of a or a thing; unqualified nega- A minallon uf as- person when and rhabd"cti'liiii> wurnis with a posterior exsertile proboscis. tive, an unfavorable estimate; as, an unfair or gocxl tlgtuHllitni. — aph- a 0-piH'ih — op''iF4-ilioiii'itl, r*.- o- thai ''mo-my- opinion; I have no opinion of him. (2) A common or r»lH'tlio-ni(»id, '/.— o-plH'^lho-piil'iiio-nnlc', a. Hav- u. the sac post^'rlor.assonie I^Im, Pithol, An Ophthalmometer (def. 3>. prevailing sentiment, or such sentiment In general ; public ng pulmonary nulmonate gastro- pods: (»ppotH^d lit proMopultnomite. Inflammation of A, th* b«MUrMt. and c. Uw ckiB-raat for opinion. — o*piH"llio-Hpnen'- Ibc muM-Ies of the n. Cr. Antiq. band or flllet for supporting tb» pMient; I. lrl«Mope wHk a dottMiag A man's own oomeienoe is hi* lole tribunal, and he should care do-ne, A t-yt-.— * the l>ack hair, broader at the hack than opb-ihar- nrim beCwMo lb* obJMXlT* Iwisw.so lka» o more Cor thai phantom upintuH * than he thould fear meeting no-pbore. n. Um haac* rsdscSsd by tk* «onM» of Um pa- agluNttf hecroaeed the cfanrchTu^ at dark. BulwkiuLttton In front: worn by women. — op^'iN- Conrh. .Anointiia- limt's ^r* I* •a doaUe. WlMathagrad* MtW Ifovet vol. t. bk. Ui. oh. ». p. 174. (K. « l» 92.] thot'lc. I.'/. Situated behind the ear: tiiphon- oatcd are h tvaad, the doabis rvdtfctlaa applied especially to the principal cen- opb- (S) Law. (a) The fomud annonncement of the conclu- Ikal'^mo- pni»'« of Um fican* tiwrooa (abo of ik ter of ossification of the petrous portion sions of a conrt In a case before it; as, the Chief Justice ri-um:. oph"- aad\ panOMofran.pandMofTan. p) Ila ifaiftod of the t^'mporal bone. II, /*. The opls- ibar-iiioph'^'u- ni aasMTtkatlkoI T that Iho anglvtangfe of rorrmtara mar b« delivered the opinion, (it) The conclusion of an attorney ihotlc bone.— op^'iM-thol'o-noH. ». - opb * o&tarmtttmd, aad proprr gUMaaa amWtHea for touching the merits of a submitted case; as, to take the Puhol. A rigid muscular spasm In tbal'^ 3Anion of (»aiisel. (4) Med. The prognosis of a phy- which the body is bent backward, op"- n. hot, , Pathol. AralyslsofAralysls of one or more of_ _ the mnacles_ of_ the cian as to the result of an ailment or of a sui^icaf op- is-thot'o-nnfit. — o-piM^tho-lon'- eye.- n. CruM. The ophtbalmlte; Ic,a. •ph-lhnl'mo-Md* eration. 3. A settled judje^ent or conviction on some eye*«talk.— apb-thal^Mor-rbex'tM*•ph , n., Pttthot. Rup-___ O'plM'l.ho-Brapli, o-pis'tho-grgf, n. tore bursting the snbjectj as religion or politics: often in the plural. 4. or of eyet>al].-apb-(hal'm»-atal, vloMA. Antiq. manuscript having y Faronible Jnd^nent or estimation; reputation; esteem; A 8ura. An appliance for holding the eyelmll Axed during a writing , a slab so inscribed, esi)e- . ,. dlSM-ctton of the eye. *2* Surg. Excision of the eyi-: any high offini^. 5t. Obsunacy in holding one's views or Oplsthosphen-, , dally a mural slab whose back has ^n operaiiiin fnvolvlngruttinglntothe eye.— aph-lhal^mo- belief; dogmatism. 6t. Kamor. 7t. Vulgar belief; n. Instrumentfordetenulnlngthetcn- been used for a later inscription, the la-Bom'e-ler, An supenBiltion. [F., < L. oplnio(n-), < opinor, think.] slon of the eyeball. earlier being turned to the wall. Ctx.opi^thoffraphos, Synonyms: belief, cnnvlrtlon. decision, determination, [< oph-tharml-a, ef-thal'mi-AMd/fnof, eye.] opb-thaVmyt. — oaih of opinion dScotJi Litw), the Hwom opinion of both hack and front. — op^is-tbog^ra-phy, n. The an expert on a technical or scientific nmtter.— public o., practise of writing on both sides, especially (jf papyrus or Much fcnrrr pr«-Yailod, and OfphUiaimta was rtfr, as U gvnnmllr the predominant sentiment of acouiniunlty.— par<-hnient. the cmmm bf^fon* th<- rataa begtn. LlTl]Co«TOini Mtaaionary Trav- to be ofo., t4> entertain an opinion; think. op'^lif-tliu'ral, epMs-thU'rol, a. SituatctI l)ehind the tU im S. A/ricii ch. U. p. m. [H. 'fiS.J o-pln'loii-a-Dl(e, o-pin'yun-a-hl, a. 1. Capable of tail, as an embryonic part in fishes. [< oi'isth- -\- Gr. oph-thai'mlc. eflhal'mic. C. 8. W. H>.« (op-, H>.') l>eing supposed or believed. 2. Debatable or question- ovra, tail.]— op'lii-lliure", n. An opislhural part. (xtii), M. 1. Of, piTtaining to, or subX'Ct to ophthalmia. able, as being mere matter of r ifther cnift formerly employed in smuggling 'UMiY.j ' opIi-tlial'^iiio-lotE'lr or -Ir-al, a. - o-pln'loned. O'pin'yund, a. 1. Having opinions. 2. opium fn.Mi India Into ( hina. — /'. One ad- Conceited: ripinionat^-d. o.^ealer, oph^lhal-ni<»l'4»-u;lMl. ". one versetl in ophthal- dicted to the hatiliual use of opium as a narc(»tlc- stimulant. o-pin'vun-ist, opinionat»e(>pnTHALMO-. person. 2. [0-] Ch. tlist. One of a sect (15th centurj) loids as stimulants or Intoxicants, espe- (»pli-lliurino-M4-<»p<>. **f-Uin\'\i\>>->^i-r,\,. n. An optical that reiecte

)iir>triitM<-iit hii\ii)L! a roiicitvf inirrur ^^lth ii hole in Its Christ in voluntary poverty. finnedanddominatesthewlll.-o.ijoint, < centiT. for illniiiiiiatini; and viewiiitc tin- interior of the o-plp^a-rouHt.a. Bumptuotis.— o-pip'a-roas-lyt, ndr>. «. A resort of oplimi-stnokers.- o.» op^i-jKun'c-ter, op'i-som'g-tv'r, n. instrument hav- pipe«rt. A form of Turkish pipe adapted eye ( < oi'HTIIAI.No- 4- -SCOPE. An thin uplB-llial''i»»-Moo|>'lr. t)hthulini>M-OiM-. <»pll-thal'niO- thread. By setting the a: 3: •wo^py. '' (oph''lhal-»ii«aVo-p>', A'. /. 11'. \Vr.), An Oplsometer. wheel against one side of II. PriicrjiHl iirH' of ih«- ophthalmoscope. its frame, and rolling it A Chinese Opium-plpe. • ph-ihal'iiio-nlat, •-(•'. S4-.- ophtualmo-. over an Irregular line, as on a map. then removing and a, the bowl (nf red pottery), enlarged. Hf thal'inrirt. straight line until the side of oph-tliMrniUH. n. [mi, -mat or -mt, p/.] rolling it backward on a the to the smoking of opium.— o.tpolHonfng, n. The nox* tYuMt. The eye. [<

av = out; •!!; IQ = f£ud, |9 = future; csk; eliarclk; db = fAe; ffo, sing;, i^k; «o; tliin; zli = azure; F. boik, dttne.

ople=lPe« 1334 Opprobrious

by exhilaration, followed by conjrestioD of tbe brain, coma, 2. One who engaeee In an opjwnency; especially, one judgments, [F., < L. oppositus. pp. of opjiono: see op- and death.— o. (poppy, it. The common iK>ppy (I\ipaver who attacks the thesis or iwsUion of another: opposed i-onent.] 90mnir'eTum) with white flow- Xortftixvident ox defendant. [< h. op/)On€n{t-)s, ppr. of Synonyms SeeCONTKARY. ers, from the juice of which oppo/iif, ()p[H)se. < od, tH'fore, -\- jtono^ place.] o|>'po-site-ly, adr. Over againstor facing atiy- the opium of commerce is thing; in a contrary manner; adversely.— op'po-Mlte- usually obtained. — o.tttmo* Synonyms: see antahontst. op''poi'-lun«''+, vt. To be Buital)le for; fit or suit. w. The utate of ix-ing opposed.— op-poi*"I-tl- kinir* "- The inhalation of leMS, 11'. (ep'pwr-tifm, a. the smoke of opium from a op'^por-tuiie', ep'er-tiDn', C. ^.), flo'roUM, rt. Jiot. Having peduncles or nitlort'scences practised cliletly In the 1 . Meeting some need, or e8i>ecially fit as occurring, said, opjKisite. — op-pos^l-tl-io'll-ous, a. Jiot. Hav- r:East. thouKh Increasing or done at the right moment; seasonable; timely; as, an ing optMwite leaves; also, opposite a leaf, as a tendril or Id western countries. A pltn^e ojyix/rtune rain, IH-dnncle.— op-po8"i-tl-pet'al-oii«, «. Hot. Placed is commonly Uie bIm of a pea Theopporfufieint«nig«ncehadffiventhepatriotgeneral time to opposite a petal. — op-po»"I-tl-po'lar, «. Having burned In a piiH>. The opium malte his preparations. poles situated at opposite extremities: said of certain ladecompoaed and tbe Infmled [H. Motley Dutch Republic vol n pt. n , ch. 2 p. 190. 62.] smoke contains the product-s i.^.^ve-cells. - op-pos'a-ti-Kep'al-oui*, a. Hot. liable. l.omx>r- such aa pyridin and coltldin. at. Conveniently exposed; [C] [< placed opiM>8ite a sepal. tun, L. opiJortumis, ob, before, 4- partus, harbor.],,p/p<,.j,Ue, The practise is baneful and de- < < n. 1 . One who or that which is in oppo- frradinp. and strenuous efforts o|>"por-tuiie'rult; op"por-tu'iioust. gitlon or marked contrast. (1) One who opj>oses or is are maklnK. In both Christian see al'spiciois; convenikxt Synonyms: adverse; an opponent; adversary. (2) One of two con- and non-(."hrisiian countries, — op"por-tune'ly,aobation of tlie Russian serfs in 1857. 3. [0-] A doc, «. 1. A liniment pre- a, tiie opening flower, siiowina- state of being oi)po8ite or opposed; contradiction; also, of the moderate factiody Opposite to the BUn. 6. Logic. Differ- to its utmost of possibleachievement-the^e are the martial virtues o-pop'a-nax, o-pep'a-nax, n. 1. giim resin used in eiice in quality or quantity, or in both, t>etween judg- A ^h'*^''. "'"«^ ^"''"«"'l .^U«T»'' "*="^ '" S't'^»ir'« O"' rl^^f^f"- ^ m...UM havinghuvinp- the same nakedn>ik-..d subjectKuhiect and predicate.nredicat^. perfumery and formerly in medicine. See gum. 2. The Country intro., p. 13. [b. & T. CO.] ments OppOHition i.s(l) contradictory, when ttie propo- »pongQ'iKG {Acacia FarneMana). 3. [O-] Bo^ A small habit. 2+* Opportuneness. 3t. Character; 4t. Impor- sitions ditfer in both quality and quantity; K'l) wlicn they European genus of perennial herbs of the parsley family tunity. [< L. opiJortunUa{t-)g, < h. opportunus; see differ in quality only, it Is («) contrary, wJien both are iUinbelliferaB). [L., Gr. o/xw,'juice, < Oiwpamu; < -f OPPORTUNE.] unlversals, and (/*) Hiibcontrary, when liolh are partic- panoj^. Kind of plant.] Synonyms: convenience, favoral)le or fit time, good, ulars; and (3> HUbaltorn, wiien they differ in quantity o-por'i-ce, o-perM-sI, C. (-pS'rl-, 7. Wr.), n. [L.I A medi- liftPpy. (Jr lucky cliance, nick of time, occasion, opening, only. See diagram lielow, and proposition. cine formerly used for dysentery, etc., compounded of wlue season. Occasion in the popular sense is a conjunction of Square of Opposition, and various autumnal fruits. circumstances which seems to require or inclines to oris op'^o-rop'o-liMtt* n. A fruiterer. fit for certain action; an opportmiilij Is a conjunction of All men are true A . . Contrary . . . E No men are true (Subaltemans). . (Subaltemans). o-pOK'Nuni. o-i>e«'um, n. [N. Am. Ind.] 1. An Amer- circumstances which nuikcs ccriaiii action possible, with . ican didelphyoid mar probability of success, advauiuK"', "r KratitU-atiuu; as, I had supial liaving the foot ocvaMon to interfere; I found an opportunity fur a good In- i easily tlnd to a hand-like and adapted vestment; a mean man can opportunity do s. mean thing, to a true man there never comes occasion for for grasping, the tail it. Compare synonyms for cause. 3 prehensile, and 10 up- op-po'8a-bl(e, ep-pO'za-bl, a. 1. Capable of being per and 8 lower inci- opposed or resisted. 2. Capable of being placed oppo- sors: colloquially ab- ' site; as, the thumi> is opixjsable to the fingers. Some men are true * " * Some men are not breviated to possum. (Subaltemate). I . . Subcontrary . . O irue(Subalternate). The common or Virgin- The apes of the New World also differ ... in the fact that their ia opos^ium (Diilelphys thumbs are never opposable likt* those of the Simiadn- and of man. 7. The covering of the body at the delivery of a thrust to MlVART Man and Ajte pt. i, p. 50. [a. 74.] prevent a counter'thrust. 8. In art, same as contrast. ranges from the central — op-po'^sa-btl'I-ly, n. 9. Chess. A situation where the kings are directly op- I'nited Suies to Brazil, op-po^HalT, n. Opposition, posed, vertically or horizontally, separated by but one is arlxtreal, has a soft op-pose', §p-pOz',r. [OP-POSED'; OP-PO'SING.] I./. 1. vacant square. [F., < L. op/xmtioin-), < oppositus; see whitish - gray pelage, To strive against physically; act in oi)position to, espe- oppo.siTK.] op-po'sure+. with black ears and cially with a view to counterbalance, countervail, hinder, Synonyms: see antipathy; collision; diboobd; dis- feet, and is esteemed as A Murine Opossum {DUlelphys defeat, or prevent effect; resist; fight; to re- SATISFACTIO.N; KMULATION. food. Many of the spe- sometimes, murina) and Voung. vs the nature of opposi- cies, as the woolly opos- sist effectually; countervail; withstand; as, 300 Spartans — op"po-sl'tloii-al, a. Of sum (d. Innioeru), nave no pouch, and the young of these opiwsed the Persian host at Thermoi)y]!e; a force that tion; pertaining to the political opposition.— op''po- are commonly carried on the mother's lack. The murine nothing can oppose. 2. To resist morally or by argu- si'tion-lHt, h. One who belongs to the opposition.— opossum (V. inuriiuf), about the size of a house-mouse, ment; exert influence against; object to. especially with op"po-«i'tIon-Iess, a. Being without opposition, ranges from central Mexico to Brazil. contrast, positive effect; contravene; dispute; controvert; as', their op-po»'l-tlv(e, ep-pez'i-tiv, a. Placing in An opossum Iiath a head like a Swine, a taile like a Rat, and is parents op/>wie(/ their marriage. op-press', Qp-pres', vt. 1. To overburden unreasona- of the bifntf^ss of a Cat. Under tne belly shee hath a bag'ge. The religion of Jesus has probably alwavs suffered more from o\y or unjustly; impose hardships upon arbitrarily; as, John Smith Virainia vol. i, sixth voyage, p. 124. [F. P. '19.] those who have misunderstood than from those who have imposed opitressed by ijurdensome taxes ; the Moguls opjfTessed the 2. [Austral.] One of other marsupials, as phalangers and it. Drummond Natural Law, Biogenesis p. 67. [J. p. '88.] Hindus. 2. To bear niwn so as to cause a sensation of dasyures. 3. To set up in opposition, physically or logically; offer pressure; lie heavy upon; as, indigestible food oppresses — n. diminutive flying pha- o-poH'MUiiMmoui^e^, A as an obstacle or adverse force; as, he opiwsed his arms the stomach. 3. To weigh down; dispirit; make weary \aBgeT lAcrofjtiieJt pr/gnueus) of Australia; the pygmy pe- to the blow. or listless; as, a mind oppressed with doubt. 4. [Ar- taurist.— o.fMhrew* «. A solenodontoid Insectivore of chaic] bear ; Overbear; overwhelm, Cuba and Mayti,aH ttie agouta or almiqul.— o.ssliriinp, n. It was a beautiful thought, yet an erring one, as all thoughts are To down A mysoid crustacean which carries its eggs in a pouch be- which fyppose the Law to the Gospel. RUSKIN Modem Jointers Opprest with multitudes, he greatly fell, neath ttie thorax. vol. V, pt. vii, ch. 4, p. 156. L^. A s. '75.] Addison Cato act iv, sc. 4.

0-pol"er-o-don'ta, o-pefcr-o-den'ta, n. j)l. Her]). 4. To set over against. 5t., _ To offer. 6t. To expose. 5+. To suppress. 6t. To press upon. 7t. To ravish. Tim Angiosfomata. [< Or. ^^/>o/e/YM, either, -}- odous II. i. 1. To offer objection or resistance; as, no one [< Y.oppresser, < \.h. oppresso, < L. opprinio (pp. Op- iodon('\ tooth.] — o-pol'er-o-doiit, a. & n. opposed. 2. To stand opposite each other, as hills. [< pressus), < oft, against, + irremo., press.] op'pl-clan,ep''i-dan. I. a. Itelating to a town; civic. F. opj}Oser, < L. o6, before, -j- F. poser; see pose^, t;.] Synonyms: see persecute. II. n. 1. [Eng.] At Eton College, a student not on the Synonyms: check, combat, conflict with, confront, op-pre«wed', ep-prest', a. 1. Downtrodden, op- foundation, who boards in town. 2+. A townsman. [< contend witli, contradict, contravene, defy, face, object prest'J. 2. Her. Same as debbuised. to, obstruct, oppugn, resist, witlistand. S<'e contend; con- OF. oppidain, < L. oppidanus^ < oppidum., wailed town.] op-pres'slon, ep-presh'un, n. 1 . The act of eubject- ^^^^^"*^'^' KEPEL.-Antonyms: seesyn- ep'i-dum. [-da, pi.] |L.] Rom. Antiq. ing ^^1 (.„,ei ^^^ y^just hardships; exaction of unjust op'pi-diim, n. A JS^'^'fSJ^Am'*' ^^^^ fortilied town; a country town as distinguished from liome, service; tyranny; as, these oppressions can not be borne. which was called urbs; a stronghold overlooking a plain. — op-pose'Iess, a. Not to be opiwsed with effect; Three things contribute much to ruin government; looseness, op- op-piK'ner-ale*^, rt. To pawn, op-pisr'nor-atet. irresistible.— op-po'ser,- - n. pression and envy. . . . Op^ressioii^ makes>8 ai poor country, at — op-pi«"nor-a'tlont, 7i. The act of pledging. op-posed', §p-pOzd', pU. Being m opposition, as m k desperate peopl Works, Fruits of Solitude in vol. op"pi-la'iion, Mp'l-l6'8hun, ;(. The act or result of block- principle, character, meaning, purpose, act. or position. maxims 36;j, 365, p. 152. U'H. 1782.] ing up or obstructing; in pathology, emphraxis. LL. [< it was expected that California would be a slave State, but the 2. The state or condition of being oppressed with injus- < L. o;>/>i7o, stop up, < 0&, before, -+-»«0, ram peopled tbe I'acifieslope with SppUntioin). didcoveryofgoldhad men opi>os«/"" rt. ol)8truct; tice or tyranny; as, the weak have borne opjrression in own. I— op'pi-lati'^ To crowd together, slaveryslavery. C. C. CoFKiN«Mi7rfinff //i« .VatioMch.35, p.4»8. [h. •1 all ages. 3. Mental depression, or dulness of spirits; -op-op'pii-la-tivet.. Obstructive. op-poH'il. ep-pez'it.r^ &ri., Logic. To assume tbe contrary op-pleie'+.{'I.it. rFilled;liicu; crowded,t;i ww«n:u. op-ple'tedt.«f |V~pit7' *» ' - - >-,,,./. 1 — ». j heaviness; languor. 4. A sense of weight or of constric- filling; fulness. e'llontt n. A nesM. Opposite, etc. Phil. Soc. tion; epeciflcally, the lassitude characterifitic of the com- op-pone't, r(. & c(. To oppose. ^m/m^, *,i*« ^n'r. vit n mencement of fevers, 5. Tliat which oppresses or is l/o-»ii*'.»P «-^it,a, 1 . Standing, situated, or placed op-po'neii-cy. epprvnyn-sl, ». [Kng. & Ir.l The condition **V hard to bear; privation or hardship. 6t. Pressure. 7t. or func-tion of being appointed to obji?ct against a tbeBls; m 'front of or "over aganist (something else or another); liavishment. [F., L. opjn'essio{n-), opj)?'essus: see the opening of a disputation, as an exercise for an academic fronting* facing: often with to, and sometimes used prep- < < ' ' -. - oppress.] op-pres'suret. degree. |< h.opponen(t-)H; see opponent. I ositionaily by ellipsis of that word; as, opposite neigh-|j Oppressive, etc. Phil. Soc. op-po'nen«.«^^|>0'nenz, ft, [-nes'tes, yw.] [L.] Anat. Ijors; the opiiosife eidc; they sat oy^yxwi/e one another. op-pro««'Iv, -ly,-iiess.

• V^» 9P.-pres'lV, a. 1 . Characterized by Or A muscle by wliicii one of the lateral digits of the hand or Is there any one so foolish.' be [LacUntiusl asks.* as to believe op- P.r*-****'* rigorous; foot may l>e opposed to one of the other digits. that there are antipodes with their feet opposite to ours! tending to oppression; unjustly burdensome or op-po'iieiit, 5p-p0'nfint, a. 1. Acting against some- Irving Columbus vol. i, bk. ii. ch. 3, p. 89. [g. P. p. *61. as, oppressive laws. 2. Disposed to oppress, or given to thing or each otner; opposing; as, opponent factions. 2. Having contrary tendency, quality, or character; op- oppression; exacting; tyrannical; as, an op)frei>sive ruler. opinions: sometimes 3. Producing a sense of depression, physical or mental; The mineral crystals . . . defac« or distort each other as they ftosed; antagonistic; as, op/wsite gather into rtppnnent as|x-rities. oosely applied to one of two correlative or different things overpowering; as, o/)}>restdre air; oppressire silence. see hard; heavy. KUSKIN MiMiern Painters vol. v, pt. vi, ch. 4, p. 36. [w. ft 8. *75.] from the standpoint of the other; as, the op}X)site sex. Synonyms: — op-pre»»'lve-ly,rtrfi'.— op-pre«»'lve-ness»n. 2. Anat. Bringing one part into opposition with another. The nature of a man's taHtes is, most times, as opposite as pos- op-press'or, cp-pres'^r, n. One who oppresses, etfpe- 3. [Kare.] Standing in front or facing; op|X>site. sible to the nature of a mnn'ft buniness. cially by the abuse of power or authority; a tyrant. >p-po'nent, n. 1. One who opposes another: espe- WiLKiE Collins The Moonstone ch. 12, p. 113. [ii.] op-prest', Oppressed. Phil. Soc. cially, one who supports the opposite side in a debate, 3. Radicallydiflferent or contrary in action or movement pp. discussion, struggle, or sport; either of two participants goins the ot'her «ay; as, an «p;^«/« motion, 4. m. 0) «?;J^^h:^;J>^^^"^':^^±J^^conveying contemptuous abuse; disrespectfully reproach- in a game, competition, or the like; an antagonist. Arranged (as similar parts or organs) in pairs, so that the ful; imi>uting disgrace or degradation; contuinelious. Before 'The Liberator' was established, I doubt whether, on ei- wliole diameter of some intervening body separates Both parties varied these formal titles by the use of such spiteful ther ride of tlie Atlantic, there existed a newspaper or mTiodical them, as leaves on a stem. (2) Having one part or organ heard and o])]}ri>hrionn epithets as party hatred so well knows now to ttuU admitted it« opponents to be freely and impartially immediately y>efore another, as a stamen i)efore a petal. tbron^hita columns — as freely as its friends. Gakrikon in O. invent and apply. ALKX. JOHNSTON American Politics ch. 1, p. Logic. Differing in quality or quantity, or both, as '89.1 JohnsonV Wm. Uoyd Garrison eh. 22, p. ^fi. \n. t». * co. '81.] 5. U. [n. H. * CO.

sofa, firm, ^sk; at, fare, accord; el^m^nt, $r = over, eighty % = usage; tin, machine, i ~ renew; obey, uo; not, ner, at^m; full, rule; but, bum; alsie; — '

opprobrium 1235 oracle

4t. Infatnoits. [<: LL. oppnbrUmts^ < L. opproMum; ference, and (ft) electroioptlcs, treating of the mutual op^si-om'e-iert; op-tim'e-tert. — op-tomV-trr, eee oppnoBRirsf.J relations of lleht and electricity; and (3) physiolosical II. Measurement of the powers of vision In general, aa Synonyms: see abusive. opIiCN, treatuiK of such phenomena as depend on bodilyDod acuteness of perception of form and color, or the extent function or hraln-actlon. — op-i>ro'bri-ous*ly, aSMlTH The Traveller 1. 301. BAMCEorr United Statem vol. it, ch. 51. p. 383. [l. b. * co. 76.] object-glass, a pencil connected with this piece following 2. The state of being abundant; luxuriance. 2. Reproach minetcdwith contempt or disdain; imputa- its movements exactly. [ < Gr. optikos (see optic, a.) -f tion of disgraceful conduct or character; viliflcation; ob- -GRAPH.] This softness, this freshness, this incomparable opulence of the verdure. TaINK England tr. by Rae, ch. 10, p. 149. iH. A w. 72.] loquy. 3. A cau^e of disgrace or ignominy. [L. < Ob, op'ti-ma-cy. ep'tl-ma-sl. n. [liare.l 1. Government by nobles upon, -t- probrurn, disgrace.] op-pro'bryt. or by a wealthy and privileged class. !i. A noble or [F., < L. opulenda, < open, riches.] op'u-len-cyj. Synonyms: see ionomixy privileged class; an aristocracy. Synonyms: see abundance; affluence; comfort. ep'ti^inet 0P:lj"gM'.®P-pif"»'. '•f. i. To militate against; conflict or -ni|t. I. a. [Rare.] Of o.i" *>P'yu;l€nii «- 1. Possessing large means **P^J*J^*'*»t,. -. *P'^"'^fL*' »vr.rt^o,n.«™ „„ „-.„» ^ -. . „_ __ _>,__. with; oppose. 2. To assail with argument; attack. pertaining to an aristocracv. lit. n. One of tte opti or property; wealth^-; affluent; a8, an o/iuleiit merchant. an aristocrat. 2. Producing or displaying In promiwmoas compan*- no prndenl man will oppuffrt the merit* ^^l^'' [< t. OpUmateS; See OPTIMATES.] abundant riches or profu- of a cootemporary in hi* own ftuppowd department. COLEBIDOE **P ***nia'ie», ep'tl-me'ttz or -ma'tes, n. ;*/. 1. Rom. sion; exuberant; profuse; copious. Worka,Biographia Uiertxria in vol. iii. ch. p. 181. [H. '58.1 Hist. The senatorial 3, or conservative party or class in the The earth is opulent enougrh to feed myriads more than are Bup- refjublic who worketl.__ in ported on it now. [ < F. oppugner, < L. oppugnOy < ot>, a^nst, + pugnOj ^^^^J the interests of the senate ght.i and nobles. Compare i»OPULARES. Starh Kuta SubHtaitce and Show lect. vii, p. 258. [o. A CO. 77.] Synonyms: »ee oppose. In kitlinKCeaar the Optimates had been as foolish as they were [F., < L. opitien{t-)g, < ones, riches.] treacherous — op-iiiiifii'er, n. An oppoeer or assailant. FEOtiDK Cirsar ch. 27. p.625. (B. 79.) — op'u-lent-Iv, a optomtis. trine or view that everything in nature and the history of OpifiJi, L- slKllt, -JIETER.I , o-puirshi-e'B§-t l< -t- mankind is ordered for the best, the order of thiiiipi in **'iPJ"'4J'" or -ti-g'ce-6, n. i>l. op'^HO-mit'iil-a. ep'so-m^'ni-o -mg'nl-a, ('aclaceae: or ». Pathol. the universe being adapted to produce the highest good! ,""'• '^''^ a former nanie. [ < (Jpuntia for An insane craving particular articles of food; morbid can ".' ^^'1 1. Work; chiefly in Latin How tie eiiWenceof evil be reconciled with the Eoodne«i of " ^""' " t."*' . daintiness regardToK God I Phrases, bee below. food. [ < Gr. optomania, < oiuoa, Optimum solves the nueslion by afflrminE that evil U the 2._ . [op'e-ba, pi.'] A work or coni- persMai'T antecedent ofeood. meat ( < heptd, boil), + mainomai, rage.] Cltlon. Spcclflcally: (1) A literary composition or pro- M. Rathomd Tkeol op"li-niiii'llc. a. Of, pertaining llie sacnunentarian view,— o, retieuia- mode. luin, relicuhited to, or believing intlinisni; tinged with masonry,— ©. Meeliie, glass or marble op'ta-tlve. n. 1. ^/'ra//i. The mode expresBlug wish or optimism; Iiojk'- mosaic, used for fiil; pavements.- o. lertorlum, lioinan plas- tler^in*. III ""} (•> sanguine,— op'll-mliil, n. 1 . ,\ b<'liever In ojiti- as the (jreek; also, !i ''vif mode. ter-work of lime and sand, for walls and ceilings,— iiiism, o. les- In Kni;l)sh the first and tblr<] •' aubiunctlve 2. One who always hopes for the best; a iK*n*oii Neilntum, mosaic composed of small cubes of marble, or thi< auxiliary nwitf are used a.- im, thy will 6e of sanguine disiHisition,- op'^ll-mlM'tlt-al-lr, arfc, glass, or clay. donr' //'/rl we In frieodablp! r^'j ! ihleastbee! ap-tlm'l-lyt,_. ., n. The stale of iK'Ing best •Pti"'caic, o-pusklni, n. [F,l A small or unimportant

IHiire. I .\ dotideratum. work, 2. op'tl-mize, ep'ti-muiz. [-XIZED; -jil'ziNo.] I. (, o-pait'cleii o-puH'ca-inmt 1-la,^(.]. "•»>"•+•, op'Ilr.np'tir. n. 1 . (If, pertaining to, or connected with To ext<>l asjhe best. II. 1. To look on the bright "• "Plum. o'piet. the eye or vision; as, the"o/>fi<- nerie. To adhere "to or [.\m. Ind.] The blue-back trout exp,,»«- optimism: -T;,?^^,;,"?,^;?;.'' Nor la_ avaii'd his »/siilt; the combination of conditions pare aroe.nt and tinctukk. (K., < L. aurnm, gold ] Optical. F. oiiiique, lir. oittikon, that prodnres lKi!t S. [< < < oimnnni ( < the average result when there is aori,m/*/. 1. Kither; else; otherwlselasa compknient): a whence abo (9>(a«, seen), •ball sec.] clioirt; of combinations; the V<>p. op'tlqur*. . mean of two or_ more...._.max- disjunctive, often with either or whether as a correlative — •pile faraaien. the aperture In tin- splienoid inium or minimum etlecls that represent the most faroT- used to introduce a word or phrase expressing an ol)ject throiigh whh-h pass the ophthalinir ,n ,r optic able result or action the acceptiince of which excludes all the other nerv.-.-a. lobe., the eorj.,™ vvv\< bndn op'tlpn.op'shtin, n. 1. The right, power, or lilierty objects or actions mentionetl; as, sink o;* swim; w/ielher of man and of tin- hljcher Htihn»ilM, ' 'ndlDK of choosing; discretion; the exercise of such riglif, good, bad, or indifferent; either w(»rk partM hi IttwiT anlrualtt nerve* ^:. .-. — i.i n-e of or starve. otif power, or liberty; liberty to elect between * vUlon, of thf Here [Mir of the cnuual iwrve*.— a. alteniatives; This orthat. not thin and that,' Id the rule to which all of tishave halMinnn. a i-oll«-4-tr if Kray maUer at tlM side of the election; choice; preference. to submit, and it Ktranfelv equalizes the destinies of men. thlnl ventricle at \lw Im f ttie In the European nations a comtanttjr increaainff number of per- • Hahkrton iHtell. Life pi. iv, letter v, p. 166. [k. beos. 75.] liriln. r-t.rini'cted with the Bona And theinselrea in cimmttancea, in which larye ohKln a option is 2. Also (by another name or word); alias: introducing »i ihf optic oenre. allowed them as to the plan on which ther will oondact their )iv««. a name or phrase; regarded as the equivalent of an- op'llr. ;.. T. H. Okkxx Proiegmmena to Ethic* 1 33ft. p. 388. |cl. p. 'HS. 1. An eje. at. A t other specitied name or phrase; as, a violin or tiddle. ma^nifvintC' or eye^laa*. 2. fVwi. The iMircha«»•*. Of^^- prep., & conj. [Obs. or Scot] Before; ere Oreat H mmm \ elective: as. tmti^uil uliidU-i^ ' ^ "" "'""ey of account, valued In fnmiicy wliha law unlilnK th<- In- theT^^ DninesdayU a^ Hook»"*^J"'t".W"at 3) pence. dex of p-fmrtlon of BMdnlla obloofate. a llKht-wuve _ ^ra-biii*'MU, o-ru-hriBsn. w. IS. Am.] . -* arennr i>i«al-ly, «p'tic-al-l, a//p. "Terence op- from Tatary, formerly common - * •, " '^" to lesson course. 4te.*tiil in England as a iK»t-herb. and Htill |>opular in P'rance by light. 2. By or in rt^lation totheright. to becho«»en from two or moreoffervd; an elective. under the name of arroche as spinach correct- «p-tl clan.op-tkh'an, rt. I. One who makes or deals a or as a op'llat, ep'tlst, n. [Recent.] One who makes and in- ive In opticaiiMtoimCTte or of the acidity of sorrel, f < F. airoche, perhaps < eye-gUaae*. 2. [Rare. J One gerts artificial oye«: used in contradistinction to whoisveTaedJnoptia. optician, L. atriplex, orach.] ar'raelit. whose baalncM Is with nat- ^ or'a-n Ouurt. Mirrom'op. usually in regard to the issue of some event or In ./our. cavity of an optic lobe, fi'-ieurr •«>. A op'^to* I *^r to Apr.. p. 219. 1 < Or opiUoM- wee optic, a.] some projMjsi-d course of action. Among the most re- c«'ll-at.~op^l.o-gram,_ n. An Im- ' »— op'tlc'M. op'tUi*, n. PhtjxirM. Thi- wcicnce that treats of J — vered wen- the Delphic oracle of Apollo, at Delphi In Greece, age of the laat object)Ject aeenseen during life. ^^ the oniric** of Mlh-tut* and ArgoB, that of at light and vi-ioii. the organ;* of (»iirhl. rhrrmiatics, and all said to be retained on the retina after Zeus Uodona, 1. An Optometer. and that of .lunllcr Amnion In the Libyan desert. that i- r-tmti'f r.fl with tti.- |.li<-iK.nii-na of 7*. sight. death.— op-toff'ra-phy, The pho- 2. Its Dial. '>!'' pr'»rt'Ks 2. The orarnlar utterance or prophecy thus given out: :.: ' r.nif f riral optlcN. enihraring tochenilcal by which an ()pt<^>- '' commonly in the of (^i t'Zt pliytiica! opllcN. (frarn Im hlt-arlied Into the vImuhI purple. — op-toni'e-ter, form a brief saying, often figura- cmt'T . f/ief/Tf/ and the rlTcctM cx- n. An optical InHimnn-nt fornieasurlnjc the range of Wslon tive, difflcnlt of interpretation or capable of more than plahir'! ,.^ .;..„, i- ,.,; .;-.iil>le n*frartlon. nmi Inter- of the eye, and ItH peculiarities as a refracting medium. one interpretation.

4i«ssout; a future; •!!; lAafMd, |9 c^k; chorclt; dta = ^; ffo, sins, ^V^\ •<>; thin; cb = a«tire; F. boik, dttne.

oraeler 1236 oratorio

^^^^^ >»»rked the River Tiari* m jjcrtaining principality or'gn-jait, ^ Or^au$;e3, a. 1 . Of or to the of or'an-$i:lte, «. Minei-al. A bright orange- weti^fL^Iih!.'tatAi boonduT"^tS^^'^'o( ute^Koman arms. — Orange, near Avlgiion, 111 Frnnce, which passed to the yellow variety of thorite. [< orangk', «.J (ilB»ON Rome\o\. i. ob. 18, p. 393. [P. 8. A co. '52.] " - counteof Nassau after 1531, and ^ave his title toWilUam, o-raiig'=u-tan" I 0-rang'-u-tan',-tang-(xiii).- Orftcles Included: (U orni oraole!«t (2i ornelciii by 7i. A " Orange, afterward William 111. of England. o-raIl8;^ou•tan?;^ *' massive red-haired arboreal an- BisBS. *s tlH- ru^titiiK "f tlu- s,u-"rt-a uHk'u-av of I) >do"a; l*""!^;, ?f -?•"»...' " thropoid ape i.SWm« >*«^yrMA*) of Borneo (S> •ra.cle;* by drcitniM, iisually eonne;rtf(l with the 8i»uc' J?^^'L^,,^'*^.^^'"!JifjPfl''^^, "^'^"..^i^,**^^ , i^VJ"^^^ I!l^ and Sumatra, title still adheres to the sovereigns of Holland as the tuariesof ,tsi-ulai>M!!j; i4» urnclet« fit' the iloaiL about 4J feet in height, younger Nassau line. 3. The deitv wliose prophecies were suppose dust of death has choked [F., < L. Arausioin-), city in France.] woods.] o-raiiff'J; A great man's voice, the (H>nimon words lie said or'angfe, n. 1 . The large round or roundish fruit (tech- o-raiiy:'=ou-tai»"t; oraWe*. B. Browning Casa Guidi pt. *.t. 8. Torn E. i, nically a berry) of OiMjs A urantium, w ith a reddish-yel- o-raii«i'Mi-taiig"J; 6. Script. (1) A divine command or communication; low and leathery rind enclosing about lU membranous oil-ran scripture (Hfb. v, Vi). divisions, each division usually containing a or 3 seeds o'raiit, O'rant, 7i. 1. We see them [the Jews] still holding fast their venerable Ora- in a refi-eshing sweetish or subacid pulp, In ancient (ireek art. a eiea which were delivered totbera four thousand vears as:o. CaKP- There are numerous varieties; as. the >IaltC8P bloods female worshiper: rep- BXLL in Campbeli and Otrens Debate vol. i, p. 195. [r. a f.] ornngc (with a red rind and pulp), tin- Washington resented usually with i holy of holies in the temple. vi, navel (a nearly seedh'ss viirietv iijuiitii from its peculiar (2) The 1 Kings 19-29. uplifted arm anti palm, I unihilfcal mark), the .>l<>diteri*nneiin »«t'e( (a wt'lU 7t. A divine messenger; a prophet. [F., < L. oracu- praying. ' known market sort), the maudnrum and tnngeriiiet^ as if 2. In Ivm, < oro (pp. orattis), pray. < of {or-), mouth.] (small, flatlish fruits with loose, easily separable rind), the early Christian art, or'a-clert, ;j. One who delivers oracles. Bergaiiiot (a pear«shaped fruit from the rind of which figure, male or female, o-rac'yu-lar. ^ o-rao'u-lar. a. 1. Of, pertaining to, or the fragrant essence called oil of berganiocis obtained), the found in the catacombsa like an oracle. Specifieally: (1) Authoritative, or sol- bitter Seville (largely used for making inannala A nfjvelist should be a comfortable, grarnilous, communicative, The Orang-utan. 1/24 2. The low, much-branched, evergreen tree (Citrus symbolize the church. Smnping fortune-teller, not a grim, laconical, oracular sibvl. Au- L. oran{t-)s, ppr. of oro^ pray, os (or-). Bulwer-Lytton My Xofet vol. ii. bk. xii, ch. 35. p. 654. [h. '60.] Tantium)thai bears [< < fruit mouth.] (2) Of obscure of hidden meaning; ambiguous or enig- the described <>-**«' *!»>*' o-re'ri-an or -ra'-. I. Per matical, as the prophecies of heathen oracles. Ae- above. It has a. *Z. tainingto or situated near a coast; &»,orarian saming to deliver opinions or statements as indisputable a greenish -brown »__ natives. II, n. One who lives on the coast, or authoritative without proof and with an air of supe- bark, ovate-oblong, L. orarius, shore.] rior wisdom and knowledge. 3. Possessed of prophetic acute, serrulate^ [< < ora, glossy 0"''a'»'*-®n» o-re'ri-en or-rg'-, n. [-ri-a. ;>;.] Gr. Ch. power; imparting divine messages; forecasting; as, an green leaves A deacon's stole, wider than that of the Western ora'"•» «er-ra'ta, 5'ra ser-re'to or -rg'to. [L.] The wavy anterior edge 2t, A slonn; tempeBt.— o-rn's:ious, a. [Rare.] Stormy. tAinPfl in thA en.:^/' of the ncrvous portlon of the retina. OT^t, or'ai-sont, n. Au orison- prayer. irumoeiweenwa\trMmiJMJr:n„T?w. *»'*'*ite, vi. [o'ra'tkd; o'ba'ting.1 fHumorous.] t^ To deliver an oration; hence, to talk oratorlcally; play the o'ral, O'ral. a. 1 . Uttercstiti)ted for any instrument Democ- which ment of this color. racy were to ora/c the law requin-s to be in wrilitiK. See table in prece- Sala Diary in America vol. ii, ch. 12, p. 307. [t. b. '65.] UKEE.VLEAK EvMetice vol. i, § 86, p. 162. [l. b. a. CO.] ding column, and o-re'te 2. Of, pertaining to, or situated at, near, or around the o-ra'te fra'tres, fr^'triz or o-ru'tefrg'tr68. [L.l SPECTRUM. ^.Her. R. C. Ch. An exhortation to the people In the service of mouth; ap. the oral orifice; oral tentacles. 3. [Rare.] The Orange (Citrus Aiirantium). A roundel tenne. the mass that they should ask for God's accepuuce of the Of, pertaining to, or using speech; as, an teacher. oral a, a, branch with flowers and fruit, and [F.,-fa'«>o* 1. communication and discussion.— adv. of the fruit. hccl. pi. o'ral-ly, 1. •nnrnnn nr«no-p. T (1) A coUcct. (^) Aftcr-coinmunlon praycrs, ap- ,"r™"i':."'^*^_"¥*:-_J In spoken words; by word of mouth. 2. [Archaic] By, — horned oran8:e« an abnonnal form o^the . proprlate tothe collect for the day. •2. (?ram. Discourse: common onlv in the phrases through, or with the mouth; as, to take morphin orally. orange. In which the carpels are partially separated.— oratio obliqua (Indirect discourse) na- *"" oratio recto (direct discourse). See discoursb. o-ra'le, o-re'l^ or -ry'le, ?*. Eccl. A white silk veil, *ive o., a small thorny Australian tree nf' 'fix." (»,.r..io~/-"'7y ornamented riobiitux, of the pittosporad family !o.., iv;»5™V «-S/2 o-ra'tion+, ri. To make an oration or address. with colored stripes, worn by the Pope at (i^Mojsnoraceff). or Its /*«„-,!. » . , , - **"^"'**<*"» o-re'shun, n. 1. An elaborate or formal certain solemn ceremonials: a form of thefanon. [LL., orange^llke fruit, which Is about IW Inclles In diameter and Is eaten by the natives. Called public speech treating some important subject in a dig- < L. o# (or-), mouth.] also orajige-thorn — or' ange:bloi4'''soni, n. The white blossom" of the orange- nified style and manner and according to the rules of o-rang', O-rang', n. An orang-utan. ou*rangf't* tree: much worn by brides as typical of purity.— o. shutter, oratory; especially, one prepared beforehand and deliv- or'angc', er't'nj (-enj, C; -inj, K; -anj, /. Wr.; -enj, S. marmalade «. A made of oranges; also, a whipped cream fla- ered on a special occasion, as a celebration, funeral, or W.\ a. Of or pertaining to an orange; especially, of the vored with orange=flower water.— o.scolored. a. Having the like; as, a Fourth-of-July ora^if?/?. color of an orange; reddish-yellow; as, an orange dress. the color of the orange; reddlsh.yellow. See orange, n., — oransre bal* an Australian rhinolophold leaf-nosed 3.— o.sdog, 71. The caterpillar of the butterfly Fapilio It may be doubted whether any compoKitionB which have ever been produced in bat {R/titioni/ct^ris itiirantia), the male of which Is bright- (resphonte^, extremely Injurious the world are equally perfect in their kind with the orange.— or'antresbird", w. An orange-breasted ANest- to orange^trees In the southern ^reat Athenian orations. Macallay Essays, Athenian Orators 434. [a. '80.] iDdian lanagcr yPhonipara zejia}. — o, cowry, a rare United States.— o.sflower, «. p. cowr>- {Ctwraen aurora) of a deep orange-color.— o, The flower of the orange-tree; 2. A graduation speech, so named in honor of the stu- orunge=blo8som.— n. dove, an Australian dove (Chry8f£naft victo?'), the male o.sgraHs, dent's high rank in scholarship: distinguished from dis- of which Is orange-colored.— A very small and delicate St.- o. moth [Brlt.J.ageometrld sertafion. or essay, assigned as lower in rank. 3. [Prov. moth i Angerona prninaria).— or^tmae^tiv'^t «• but- John's-wort (Hi/pericum Saro- A Eng.J An uproar. 4. [Archaic] prayer; a solemn terfly having wings with orange-colored tips. thra or nudtcaule). See pink- A wEKD.— o.sinite* n. A mite petition. [< h. oratio{n'), < oratus; see oracle.] Vakietibs of Obanoe Coloring-Scbstancks. that feeds on orange-scales, as Synonyms: see speech. o-rn'lion-er+, n. who petitions. Name. Source and Synonj-m. Use. Tyroqlf/phus f?/orer/.— o.speel. One 71. The skin of the orange, used o-rn"ti-uii'el<', o-r6'shi-un'cl, 7*. [Hare.] A short oration.

in medicine and as a flavoring In I < L. vratiiutcuUiy dim. of 07-atio(7i-); see oration.] a-llz'a-rinor'ange. Action of nitric acid on cookery; also, a confection made or'a-tor, er'a-t^r, /i. delivers alizarin DyestulT 1. One who an oration, therefrom.— o.sqnit, m. Ja- an'tl-mo-ny o.. AntlmonlouB sulfld Pigment A especially one appointed to deliver an oration on some maican tanager ( TanapreUa 7'u- cad'ml-mn o.. Cadmium sulfid particular occasum; formerly, one who spoke in favor Pigment j?cofto). — Cbl-nese' o Fromcoal-tar: probably or'ange-rool", w. of some special cause; aii^dvocate or defender; Hydrastis Canadenttift. See oold- as, the amixture Pigment orator of the day; a HNSEAL.- o.sscnie, 71. Homfn orator. chrome o Basic lead chromate Pigment A coc- dl-meth'yl-an'MIno. Gold orange* cld or scale-Insect that affects Cicero telU us that he never liked an orator who did not appear the orange, as the red in Bome little dl-phe'nyl-am'In o... Orange IV* scale (As- confusion at the beginning of his speech, and con- pidiotus aurantii) or the purple fesses that he himself never entered upon an oration without trem- gam-boge' o.i An alkaline solution of bling and concern. Addison Spectator Nov. 1711. gamboge mixed with scale (Mytilaspis citricola). See ai, SCALE-INSECT.- o,=Bkin, n. leadacetate Pigment 1, 2. An eloquent public speaker; one possessed of flu- Orange-pt-el. »2. A reddish-yel- gold o. Anamldo-azo acid com- ency, skill, and oratorical power in making public ad- low skin peculiar to new-born In- pound Dyestufr dresses; fants.- o.ttawny. I, a. Of a as, he was a bom orat07\ mad'der o Orange lake* The Orange-dog. 14 dark, dull orange-color, .II, n. He is an orator that can make think as he thinks, and feel Marso.^ An artificial Iron ocher. Pigment me , larva (the destructive A dark, brownish orange-color. as he feels. WEBSTER in Private Correspondence, Xov. 10, 'i*s mln'er-al o.3. A variety of minium.... Pigment ^att/T'llar. or orange-doK) -O.Uborn, «. Same as na- in vol. i, p. 465. [L. B. &. CO. '57.] mixed o mixture of any usmatt-ria ext^^nded; A per- TIVE orange.- o.*wife,7i. A with 1^, manent red and a per- 3. In English univergities, an officer charged with spe- a business of manent yellow Pigment Z^^^Z^.^i^i'''' JTr^j'iPr'STuS^ cial clerical duties. 4. Law. The comj^alnant in a naph'tbol !• o. Orange chancery proceeding; a petitioner in chancery. 5+. An ncu'tralo mixture of yellow A lar fruit of Solnnurn orationer. F. oratem\ L. orator, oratus; see ocher and Qnitoeiutfi, about the size of a small [< < < brown mad- orange and eaten by the oracle.] der Water-color Peruvians. o. chrome., Chrome orange" or^'aiisje-ade', er'gnj-dd', n. A beverage made of or- or'^a-to^rl-aii, er'a-to'ri-an, a. 1. R. C. Ch. Of or or'ange I*.. An oxy-azo coal-tar ange-juice, sugar, and water, pertiiining to a priest of an oratory. 2t. Oratorical. color Dyestuff or^an-g-eat', ©r'an-zhat', C. W.^, or O'rdn-zhg', Tl'.s or"a-to'rl-aii, w. R. C. Ch. A priest belonging to an or'angell*.. oxy-azo I An coal-tar (or'an-zhat, /.), n. 1. Candied orange-peel. 2. Or- oratory; especially [0-1, one of the Fathers of the Ora- color DyestufC ^ angeade. [F., orange; see orange, /; tory. They are not under vows See ORATORY, 4. or'ange III. Gold orange* < ^ —

His brother . or'ange IV. An amldo-azo add coal- Or'ang^e-Isin, er'gnj-izm, n. The principles of the Stei)hen [Goffe] . . became a priest among the tar color Dyestuff Orangemen; Irish Prott^stantism. Oraiorians in Paris, and afterwards a chaplain to (jueen Henri- or'ange etta Maria, G* An oxy-azo color Dyestuff Or'ange-man, er'gnj-man, n. [-men, jtI.] I. Origi- o. lake Ezra Stiles Judges of Charles I. ch. 1, p. 16. [e. b. 1794.] An orange madder lake Pigment nally, one of the Irish adherents of William III., ^>rince or'ange N Orange IV* I or"a-tor'I<'-al, er'a-tor'ic-al, of Orange and king of England, as the champion of a. Of or pertaining to o.o'cher Spanish ocher* ' oratory or an orator; displaying oratory; befitting an o. or'pl-meot. Arsenic Protestantism against the deiiosed James II. of Eng- disulfid or real- orator; rhetorical; as, ora/onco/ inspiration. gar Pigment land and Louis XIV. of France. 2. Now, a member of o. pal'a-tlae.. secret He. with no oratorical display. A phenol color from l the society established by these men to insure the Spoke to the in own coal-tar Dyestuff Protestant succession and supremacy. The order was farmers their rough wav. o. Will Carleton Festival *>f Industry st. 5. nu'ftet. An orange madder lake Pigment fonnally suppressed In 18.%, but silU exists, especially in o. Ter-mirioD,. A mercury vermilion.. Pigment Ulster. Branches or lodges have been established in the or^a-to'rl-alt; or"a-to'ri-an+; or"a-tor'IcJ; Unl'll-tuno.... Thallium chromate Pigment United States, Canada, and elsewhere. or"a-to'rl-ou8t.— or"a-to'rl-al-Iyt, or"a- a-ra'Dl-tim o.''^. Barium uranate I*Igment 3. [Archaic] Any Irish ProteeUmt. tor'lf-al-ly, or"a-lo'rl-ou»-lv+, adv. zinc o Zinc nitroferrocyanld. Pigment or'an-ger, er'en-jer, n. A vessel in the orange-trade. or"a-to'rI-o, er'a-tO'ri-O, tf. 1. Mus. A sacred com- er'{3nj-ri, Synonym,* Rich bri»htcoIori, subdnwlorange'i. dull orrntf^ **'''":!'Se-ry, n. [-RiES, pi.] 1. A place for position for solo voices, chorus, and orchestra, usually reddish oraove 4 britrbt-reddiah orange^, brig-htoraii(fe e. oranjfc cultivating orangc-trees; an orange-gTove or -greenhouse. semi-dramatic, the text of which is generally taken from yellow 7, I, II, in. iV. G. and N are trade names. 2t. A i)erfmne, extract of orange; also, a kind of snuff. or founded on the Scriptures: sung withoutaction; also. sofa, firm, ^k; at, fftre, yxord; elgm^nt, jr = over, eight, § = usage; tin, machine, | = renew; obey, no; not, ner, atom; full, rule; but, born; aisle; oratorize 1237 orchestrion

rarely, a similar composition on a mythological or ideal or-blc'^a-la'rls, Sr-bic'yu-le'ris or -u-lg'ris, n. [-res, bone In some vertebrates. See Illus. under sphenoid bone. subject. Compare sirsiic. -rlz or -res, /V.] A muscle that surrounds or encloses an — or'^bi-to-sphe-noPdal, a. or'bl-to-stat , Sr'bi-to-st-at", «. Craniom. inetru- Thtf Orntorio was derived from tbe relicrioas tragedy in the opening: as. the orbicularis oris, surrounding the mouth. An ment for ascertaining the centers of the an- Midillf Ages, of which it presents a modified lorm. Its on^n has See illus. under muscular system. [LL. ; see orbicular.] been ascribed to St. Phillipo Neri. who, in 1540, formed terior openings of the cranial orbits. trenerally or-ble^'ii-late, ©r-bic'yn-let or -Igt, a. Made into or [< Die celebrated congregation of tbe Oratory in Rome; one of its taking the form of an orb or orbit; orbicular. [< L. or- ORBiTo- + Gr. stafos, placed.] objectii beintr to deter yotuiff people from profane amusements by n. Same aa orbation. biculatyjt, orbtciUus: see orbicular.] or-ble'u- or^bi-tudet, or'- rendertag relii^ious services a« attractive as possible. < bi-tyt, Palxkk Theory of Music i 715, p. 57. [CH. A CO.] Ia"tedJ.— or-blc'u - late - ly, adv.— or-bIc"u- orb'less, Srb'les, a. Having no orb, es- n. state or quality of being orbiculato. 2. The text of an oratorio, or the performance of SQch la^tion, The pecially no eye. Sr-bll'I-us, n. actioolmaster addicted to flog- a composition. 3. Same as oratory, 4. [It., < LL. Or-biPi-us* A orb'slike", erb'-laik", ging: from the name of the master of Horace. a. Resembling an oiatoniim, place of prayer, < L. oratorius^ oratorical, orb. Such an Orbilius mars more scholars than he makes. < orator- see orator.] or'''bu>]i'na, er'bin-lai'iiaor-bu-lt'na, n. T. F'ULLER in Bamard'8 Journal of Education vol. Ui, p. 157. •r'a-lor-Ize* or'a-t§r-Qiz. ri. [Colloq.l To orate: usually A globigerinoid foraminifer (genus Orbu- humorous; as, oratorittng college boys, or'n-tor-iset. or'bit, Sr'bit, n. 1. A path or track; specifically, the lina). [DinL < L. ot^is, circle.] or'a-to-r^, or'a-to-ri. n. [-ries, ;V.j 1 . The art of pub- path in space along which a heavenly body moves about orb'y, Srb'l, «. [Archaic] Kesembllng or ro- lic epeakin^: the ability bo to six'ak in public as to It* center of attraction. It is a conic section, upon which tating as an orb. convince, persuade please, arouse, move, or one's hearers; perturbations are superposed by the attraction of other ore. Src, «. [Archaic] 1, An orca, or some eloquence; as, the Itemosthenes oratory of a would not attracting ixKlies. other cetacean. *Z, An Imaginary mailed move him. animal; a dragon. [< L. orrtj, grampus.] If the earth could be suddenly stopped in her orbit, and allowed orkt* Oratory was to the Greeks what the palpit and the preas have to fait unobstructed toward the sun under the accelerating intlu- or'ea, Sr'ca. n. [L.] grampus or killer AnOrbltostat. been to modem F^urope. enoe of his attraction, she would reach the centre in about four A T li. May Democracy in Europe vol. i,ch. 2, p. 48. [a. a 8. '89.] (genus blades (b, months. C. A. YouSQ The Sun ch. 1, p. 44. [a. '81.] Oral)- The 2. The exercise of eloquence; eloquent language. 3. Or-oa'dl-aii, Sr-ke'di-an. I. a. Per- ?) ^"^ inserted 2. AnaL & Zool. (1> One of the two cavities of the Hhel. The form of discourse or composition whose ob- taining to the Orknev Islands, near the 12 *t skull containing the eye and ita associated oi^ns. Sec t^' ject is to p.oduce an effect on another mind. It em- north coast of Scotlaml. H. «. A native the illus. under j^kull. (2) Entom. The ring around theeje, iSr hSe braces oratory iiroj>er, which addresses present minds, or inhabitant of the Orkneys. [< L. Or- (a>. they are freauently more or less differentiated. \3) Ornith. The »{..< v.v .M.-K-ion. fifuifolary comjMMition., which ad- cades., Orkney Islands.] separated until eyelids and skin surrounding the eye. 3. [Rare.] A " ^^% (t minds. See literatire. or'ca-iiet, 5r'ca-net, n. The plant Al- '''^T ^^^^ small orb. f < F. orMle, < L. orbitd, track of a wheel, kUdk branches of oratory proper, according kanna Hnctoiia. See alkanet. [< F. < orbis, circle.] bJlow The t< '. itre: (1) didnctir or philotiobhic ora- orcatiete^ plant, < Sp. orcanefa, var. of hole (c)'is then or'bl-la, Sr'hI-tu. n. [-t-*, -tt or -tf, pi.] Anat. & Zool. lor>, t'> uiiKhien or Instruct ilie hearer, embracing Iht? be- An orbll. [L.; nee orbit.] o/cant/a; see alkanet.] or'c'ha-uotf. midway lecture. wliMitlllc dlwours*'. etc.; (2> apotleiclic or de- *^^" **** or'ce-lii, f fir'sg-in, n. Cher/i. A red- "P mo tiNira live, to awaken feellnK.e8l>ee(ally tbe sentiment or'blt-al. $r'bit-al, a. Of or periaining to an orbit, as of ap(>rotmilrMi>; «:!' juflirial or l'4iri-n*aringvInes,etc.— o.*orlolf* n. A common North- ing or praying: supplication. [< L. oratoria (defe. 8,4, American oriole (/c/^*r(M*»t/rj««). the male of which Is black and oruroriumu < oratoritis: see oratorio.] chestnut. i'Allvd also baxhird Ii(illiinore,ch€fitnnt hang- nfMt, and J<>e->ncfet. Synonrms: see spEErii. or'ohard-lng. Sr'chard-ing, n. 1. The cultivation of - Fninem of the Oratory, see oratoriajt. • • ; *.' \ • •-- or'a-treiui, er'a-tres, n. A female orator, orchartis. 2. liround covered with fruit-trees; an or- •r'a-lrlx. ar'a-trU. «. (L.I 1. Late. A female petitioner chard, or orchards collectively. In a chancery proceedlne. *2. An oratress. Here and there is a farmhouse with its clustered out-baildings; orb, 9rb, r. I. /. 1. To surround, enclose, or shut up here and there a hlotch of wood, or of orchardiny. D. (J. Mitchell HW Days at Edgewood first day, p. 8. [8. '66.] as in an orb; encircle; at^orted with light. ' 2. To shape into an orb; form in or into a circle; roll together. or'fhard-lMt, Sr'chard-ist, n. One engaged In fruit- culture in M lentfth ther jrield. bat jointly atill aspire orchards. To orb their scattered troops atkd io Arm rmnk retire. or-oliel'laiweed'^, ftr-kel'a-wtd", n. Anv one of vari- Tasso JerumUam DHivrred tr. by Wtffen, can. 9. st. 94. ous lichens of the genus Hoccella, found on 'the maritime II. i. [Rare.] To become roand or orb-like. rocks of hot or warm temix-rate regions. See archil. orbt, CI. Bereft, especially of children, [< orchtUa (= archil) + weed', n.\ or-ciill'la« orb^n. 1. A roundedmaan; a sphere or globe. >Cl»ri- weed";. MtainB In harden *d orAs the Mhcmlboy moalds the snow. or'ehe-o-eele", ftr'kg-o-sll", n. Pathol. Humoral

Gat THvia bk. It, I. SM. hernia; a tumor or inflammation of the testicle. [ < Or. (I) Any spherical heavenly body, as the sun or a star. orrfiht, testicle, + A*?/?, tumor.] or'chl-o-eele''t- Lared tnr its charm, be sits and learns to trace or"eiie-ot'o-my, 6r'keot'o-mi, ». Surg. Removal of TIm 1111001(111 wandcvian of tbe ortm of space. a testicle by excision; castration. [< Gv. orchis, testicle, X^BAS. SntAOCi Curioaity st. 7. -\- -TOMY.J or'Vlil-dot'o-myt; or^ehl-ot'o- .'i Tbe eye or eyeball. (S) One of the enveloping MyJ; or^ehl-to'nit-a:: or-ehot'o-niyj. spheres supposed by the ancients to revolve about the or'elie«, ftr'kez, h. Tlural of orchis. earth, and to carry with them the planets in tlieir mo- or-elie'HiM, Sr-ki'sisoi- -ce'sis, ». The art of dancing, tion. 2. A circle or orbit, or anything circular; as, esiM^cially in the Greek choral dance: orchestic. [< chariot-^/r6« ii. f., chariot-wheels); s^ieclfically. In mili- ps arrangetl in a circle, as for giliy, n. A treatise on dancing, especially as illustrated tlie piirjKwM' of repelling im attack. 3. The globe In the y (fiagramB.— or-clieH'lle. I. a. Of or pertaining regalia of a soven-ign. See JiofNi)*. 4. Arch. Same to dancing. II. n. Same as orchesis. as B*»s!«». 5. Atitrol. Tlie sphtin^ within which astro- Or^ehes-H'I-die.er'kes-tQl'i-dtor-tt'i-d^, n.;y. Crust. logical influence, as of a planet, is assumed to extend. A family of corophine amphipods without mandibular 6. Ilian-.) Figuratively, that which suggests roundiHvs pilpi, including the beach -fleas. Or-ehes'tt-a, k. or conipleteneHu, ax a period of time or sphere of ac- (t. g.> [< vrrav^er, n. An orbltelarlan spider. viol cla^H is prominent, or at least i)re8ent. as distin- •rb*s n. \ tdnnk panel or window. guiwheil or'bnte*^, n. Ilereared, as of parents or cbfldrcn. from a militarv band; also, ibe instruments on - or-ba'ilont, n. BereareinenC. which they play. See illus. in precwliug column. orbd,/;. in front of them. 3. Second violins. 4. VioloncfUoM. 6. Violas. diately ln'fore the stage, occupletl by the nistrumental 6. Fhite*. 7. OboM. S. CUrinets. 9. Horns. 10. BaMOons. 11. or'bic*. '/ lionnded; splHTlral; circular, or'blr-alt. musicians; sometimes, by extension, the part of the lower or'bl-«|pt, n A Mtiiall ^rom. fl(K>r or parquet near thenu 3. Anciently, in the Greek or-bh'''u-lar, Ar hlc'yu-lur, a. 1. Having tbe shape t. An orcbeatra'acore. as prepared for the ccmdnctor (first page and Roman theaters, the approximately semicircular or form of an orb or orbit; circular; spherical. 2. Well finalo of Beethoven's C minor symphony). space from which the tiers of seats rose, in the (Jreek roiiiideil- full or complete. 3. Hot. Perfectly or very theater reservwi for the chorus, and in tbe Itoman theater nearlv clrnilar: said of a flat body like webi^ ae the Epeiridsp. { < L. ortAf, circle, -f tela, web, reserved for the seats of senators and other distinguished a leaf or petal. < I.L. orbicutaris, prob. < ffjro, weave.] — or^bl-le'iar, a. Pertaining | < men. 4. In New England churches (18th century), the L. orf/irtt/i/j'. dim. of orbij>, circle.) to or making a circular web. or^'bi-te'loUHt. gallery opposite* the piilpit, for the acconnnodation of tht^ Synonrms : «^ mnND. — or''bl-le-la'rl-aii, a. & ;*.— or'bl-tele, //. choir. orchestre, Gr. Vr- orblcolar bone* a Any one of the Orbitelarite. [< F. < orchestra, < oicheoinai, dance.] orVhe»i-ler+ or -tret. r 1(1 separate In fetal orblto-, orbit-. iX'rived fn)m Latin orbita, orbit (see 1 •• of car. Later or'elien-tral, 6r'kes-tral, V. \V.^ H'r.lSr-kes'-, E. I. W."*), the ORBIT): combining fonnB.~«r''W-lol'd«l, a. Charac- n I to the Incus.— o. a. Relating to or of the nature of an orchestra; composed terized by orbltolltes; as, orhifni ,'nl Uincstone.— or-blt'- Ilguiiirui. a ilk'-t)iicrlets and a cyclical inrKlfuf growth, or^bi-lo-na'ptal, r "f Kk- component elieM-tra'tloii. /^ 1. The act or art of comiK>sing «f p[irola ro- a. Of or pertaining to the orbit and the nose.— nr''lii-(n- I' Alth Internal radial or arranging music for an orchestra; instrimientation. tumtifoUa^^ «. *>f oriMTialnfng to the <»rblt and (he pineal I.J Rln'e*al* !i. [Reci-nt.] Figuratively, hanuonious combination. rKly.— or^bi-fo-roH'trnl, a. Of or pertaining lo the Sr-kes'tri-t?n, n. mechanical mu- or-blr'u-lar-ly.

an « out; •II; lA ^ feud, IQsfntvre; e^^k; church; dh = ^; ffo. Bine, ipk; so; thin; zh =: azure; F. boA, dttne. <,from: i, obsoUU; t^ tariant. ^ § • —

orcheNtromanla 1S3§ order

or-clie«*'tr©»ni«'nl-a,*rke*"tro-m^nl-a/>r -mg*-, n. fti- of evidence, as in trial by fire, water, poison, or battle: — little more than varfetles of the Doric and Corinthian t/iol. Saine as ruoRSA. |< orchestra + uania.] an appeal to the immediate judgment ot God. were not used by the Creeks, and are soineliines called the or'ehic* Ar'kic, hot iron was carried nine paces. .If no chidacese). See plate of flow£rinu plants, at plant, injury appeared after three days, the accused was declared inno- 14. Arch. A column with its entablature, or a range of figs. 17 and du. cent. Knight England vol. i, ch. 8. p. 33. [i. K. ¥. A co. '80.] columns collectively, with theirentablatures. 15. Zoo/. Orchids are remarkable for the [< AS. ordel, < or- ftir a- (see a-^) + d^, part.] or'- A group of families, or a single type, with ciiaracter- UDMtal firurf ot their irreipilar dalt; or-da'lt-unit. istics of higher than family rank. 16. Hoi. A group flowers. wEk-h . . . are so vartoiu Synonyms : see proof. in classification between a genus or tribe in form that therv U sc-arcrly a and a class: — n. The down-bark of West coonBon reotile or insect to which or'de-ahbark". Af- in phanerogamic botany usually equivalent to a family' rica, usi'd fn ordeal. ii. Same as OBM of tliem have not been —o.fbean. Calarar 17. Math. A number expressing the degree of complex- RKAN. See BEAN, o.iiiuti.— o.«rnot. It. The root of Ukened. J. Lindlet VegetcUMe ity of an algebraic exjjression, sometimes as measured bv JC'ngdom order Ui,p.l74. [BR.AB.] a spech^s of StrychnoH, used by Africans In ordeals. — o.» tree. n. Any one of several African trees yleldfng some tile number of times in succession some important oper- orchU' [< L. (assumed stem pofsonons product used In ordeals by the natives; as, the ation is repeated; specifically, the number of times a <»vhiil-); see Orchis'.] is ordeal'tree of Madagascar ( Tanyhinia or Cerbera rene- quantity successively diflerentiaU-d; the degree of an orchid-, orchldo-, or- nifera), and that of South Africa {.Acokanthera venenata algebraic curve that gives the number of points in which or Toxicophlma Thiinberyii), both of tin' dogbane family chl-, orohio-. Derived it may be cut by a straight line. 18. Phren. The fac- (Apoci/nacese); also, the sassv-tn^' (Erytlirophlieuyn Guine- from Greek orrAts-. testicle: ulty that gives a love of jnethod in all things. en.v) of Sierra Leone. Of the tlrst the kernel 19t. combining foniit*.— or^chld- of the fruit is Suitable used; of the two latter, the bark. care; preparation: usually in the phrase to take aPsi-n, n. Pitthol. Neiira!- oWde-na-ryt, 71. An ordinary. order. 20t. Honor or rank. [< F.ordre, < L. o?do irUtor pain in the it'8tk'lt>. or* or'deuet, a. liegular.— (ordin-), order.] rhal'si-a:; or'^chi-al'- or'dene-Iyt, adv. gl-at.— or^chid-ec'to- or'der, er'dgr, rl. 1. To give a command or direction Orders of Chivalry, to; as, to o/'rfer an army to advance. mytn. SanieasoRCHEDTOMV. 2. To give instruc- partial list or abbreviations used in this table. — or^chld-l'liH, n. Same tions for the doing or making of; issue a command for; Ab. Az. = Abdul Aziz Ferd. =Ferdinand Ptr. as ORCHITIS. — or'eliid-o- as, to a suit of clothes: ^Patriarch order to order a dinner; to order Ab Mjd Abdul Grh. =Gerhard Kvnsb. cele, H. Piithol. SwelllnK or = Ravens- a stock of goods. 3. To put in order or cause to be or- Medjid Greg. = Gregory berg tumor of ilif testicle, or"-* derly; subject to system in arrangement; array: also, to Alxr. = A lexa n- Han. =^Hanover Rum. = Rumania chid-onVuF*:i or'clii-o- . „ ^,^ dria HS. =Holy An Orchid. arrange in a rank or row; as, to order a line of infantry. See San. = 8ancbo rele:.— or''eliid-o-iny"e- Alp. = Alphonsus Hond. —Honduras Sc. =Scotland lo^niR. /{. I'lithoL CaiU'tTOUS 1. Structure of a flower typic- If it [playine cricket! were done as an ordered form of exercise, A..H. = Au8tria- K.-h. =Kouang- S. C. — Sund e t affection of the testicles.— al of Orchis: a, an anther-cell for health's saKe, it would become work directly. Hungary hsu C h u 1 a- KUSKIN Croimt of Wild lect. i, 8. [w. 8. '66.] Or'^vUltl'On*CUf*,}l.I^1tflOl. showing pollen-mass (pollini- Olim p. A Brd. ==Branden- Lux. =Lu xe m - longkum Tutnor of the testicle.— or"* "™*' .P' '"« (ouch containing 4. To regulate or bring into conformity to burg burg S.F.A.K.=ShahFeth the viscous a plan or chi-o-dyn'i-a, «. Pitthol. glands of pollinia; Br. = Brothers Magn. =Magnus Ali Khan stigmatic purpose; dispose; estalHish; as, he hath ordered my Pain In or ni'uralKli* of the te«- 8(, surface; pi, pi. pet- Bruns. ^Brunswick M rg. = Margrave Sul. =Saltan als; .s.M, 8, sepals; I, lip; up, spur. ways; to 07'der the household with care. 5. Ecct. tide. or'Vhid-o-dyn'i-at. To Burg. = Burgundy Ma. The.= MariaThe- S. & N. = Sweden St 2. A longitudinal section Or''ohl-daVe-ie,Sr'ki-de' of the ordain, as in Anglican churches: as, he was ordered dea- Oast. = C'astiIe resa Norway flower showing 8tigTna(8f> more con. [< L. ordino; see ordai.n.] Chs. =Charle8 = Maximil- V'za. = Venezuela 6g-i or -da'ce-e, n. pi. Bot. plainly. 3. A polUnium showing Synonyms: see arranoe; dictate; prepare; regit- C. F. S. = Congo ian Vic. Em. =Victor Em- An order of monocotyledon- %iscoua glands 4. (ff). Diagram late. Free Stale Mtgro. = Montene- manuel ons herbs — the orchis fam of the flower. 5. Fruit in oehis- Dan, = Danilo gro Wflrt. -WOrtem- cence. — to order arms (.Mil.), to bring a firearm perpendic- ily E. = Elector M.-H. =Mut9-Hito berg -perennial tuber-bearing ularly against the right side, with the butt on tlie ground.— or epiphytic plants ha\ing often showy curiously irregu- to o. up, Ineuclire, to direct the taking up of a card turned Dates given are authentic or proltable lar flowers with Oparted perianth adnate to the 1-celTed up as a trump, by the dealer, in place of a discard. • For others, see Abbreviations, in Appendix. — or'der-a-blte, «.— or'der-er, ovary, innumerable ovules on 3 parietal placentae, and , , -,- or'der,der, n. 1. MethodicalMethodici and harmonious 1 or 2 gynandmns stamens with the pollen cohering in 1. arrangement,^ , 6 masses. It embraces 5 tribes, 370 genera, and abont whether serial or collective, as of successive things or of liarts or elements; systematic disposition or regulation; 5,000 species, found in all parts of the world. f< Ok- Actual or Re- as, the of Name of Order. cuis'.l Or-chld'e-a.-^.— or"chi-da'eeoii8, a. order a discourse. 2. Hence, a right arrange- ^ putedFouuder. ment; proper or working condition; available state; as, NVarly all our orchidaceous plants absolutely require the visits ^ machinery out of or '^ of instfU to remove their pollen-masses and thus t^> order in order. fertilize them. ~ Darwix Oriyin of Speciea vol. i, ch. 3, p. 32. [J. M. '88.] When a man's knowledjfe is not in order, the more of it he has the greater will be his confusion of thought. or-chid't'-al. <*r-kl(l'c-al,«. Bot. Af'ri-can Ke-demp' Same as oechidaceous. Spencer study oi'-tTiid'e-aiitt or-cliid'e-oust. of Soeiology ch. 11, p. 267. [a. '89.] tlon Liberia" 1879 Government direction, Afri-canStar or"cliid-ol'o-g:lKl, Sr'kid-el'o-jist, n. A student of 3. A command, or regulation made by au- C. F. S." 1889 Leon. 11, Bel. Al'can-ta'ra Spain U56 or six'cialist In orchidoloj;^'. thority: an injunction ; as, a policeman's oi'der to move Br. Barrlcntes An-nun'cl-a'tioni on; tlie Italy 1362 Amadeus VI. or^olild-ol'o-gy, Sr'kid-el'o-ji, n. The science or wrfer was promulgated. ,; Hatha G.B. 1399 Henry IV. 1 have never in my life questioned or disobeyed study of orchids: the branch of botany that deals with an order. Ba-va'rI-an Crown Bav.§ 1808 W. T. Max. Joseph Sherman .Memoirs vol. ii, ch. 23, p. 367. [a. '75.] 4j orchids. I [< ORCHID + -OLOGY.l Black Ka'gle Prussia 1701 Frederick I.

Sjjcciflcally, in i or'clill, Sr'kil, n. 1. The violet-red, purple, or blue 4. law , any direction of a court made to * Bustof Bolf-varS V'za.l 1823 Congress Peru Cal'a-tra'va coloring-matter or dyestuff obtained from archil. It is be entered of record in a cause, and not included in the Spain 1158 San. Ill, Cast. Christ HS.Ptg* 1318 seldom used alone, on account of its transientness, but final judgment. 5. Com. A commission or instruction Denis, Itg. Chrys-an'the-mura Japan! 1876 Mikado gives a rich tint or bloom to other dyes, as indigo. to sujiply, negotiate for, purcliase, or sell something; as, M.-H. Civil Mcr'lt Bel.§ 1867 Leopold II. Roccella tinctoria, and other species an order for dry-goods; specifically, a written Instru- of the grenus, furnish the dye Crown Prussia 1861 Wliriam 1. known as orchil. BESSKY Dolany 402, 308. [H. ment, drawn by one pereon and addressed to another, T p. H. A CO. '89.J Crown of It'a-ly Italy* 1868 Vic. Em. II. directing the payment 2. The lichen, the source of this dye; archil: chiefly in of money, the rendering of serv- Crown of Ru-ma'ni-a.. Rum. 1881 King Cliarles icCj or the delivery ^ Crown of Wiir'tem-' commerce. [< OF. ore/«?A archil.] or'celllej: or'- of something to the bearer of the berg4 i ....i MS.* 1099 tion of the testicle. [< Gr. orcAi«, testicle.] or-cliel'- House of Ho'lien-zol'-; 8. A class or bod^ of persons united by some common (Fred. Wm. tin}; or"«-lild-l'ltitt.— or-chlt'lc, a. lern Prussia 1841 Cons.ft Chs. bond and distinguished from the rest of society as hav- { or-chot'o-iny, n. Surg. Same as orcheotomy. I Anth. Fred. ing the same or'clii, (Sr'sin, n. Cltem. A colorless crystalline occupation or profession, as subjected In'dl-an Em'plrei"....! G. B. 1878 Victoria

to the same religious rules, I'ron Crowni 1 1 or'cliie, f compound (CjHsO,) derived from certain or as ranking thetiBelves A.-H.* 1805 Napoleon I. together for some ends. Ka'la-kau'a I Hawaii 1875 KalakHiia 1. lichens, as archil, and from aloes. With various re- common Specifically: (1) A Ka-me"ha-me'ha I Hawaiill 1865 Kamehameha agents it yields colors used for dyeing. society of persons organized for mutual insurance, pro- [< orchil.] Ka'pl-o-la'ni Hawaiill 1880 KalakHua Sr-kin-li-fgrm-, tection, aid, social culture, etc.; as, the Order of Odd I. or'cu-ll-rorm'', a. Cask-shaped: said u Le'glon of Hon'or France* 18IB Con. Bonaparte Fellows. (3) monastic or religions of the cells of some algie. [< L. orcula, dim. of orca, A body; as, the order Le'o-pold A.-H.* 1808 Francis of Benedictine monks. 9. honor I. bult, + -form.] An or dignity con- 44 Leopold Bel.* 1832 LeoiMild I. ord^f n. A point, edge, or beginning, ordct. ferred by a prince, government, or sovereign, usually ta- S4 Loyalty Baden 1715 Mrg. Chs. Wm. or-dain', Sr-den', vt. 1. To give formal orders for; king the form of memljership in a body copied from the Ma-rl'a The-re'sa A.-H. 1757 Ma. The. MaxM-lnil'ianH Bav.5 appoint or establish, esiiecially by law, decree, or ordi- medieval orders of knighthood; also, the insignia of such 1853 Max. II. MaxM-mlrian Jo'sepli. Bavaria 1806 Max. Joseph nance: prescribe: order; enact; as, ordained by Fate; honor; as, the Order of the Garter: he wore all his or- Mer'Itis I Prnsslal 1665 Pr. Chs. Endl the council ordained that no fireworks should be set off. ders. The most prominent examples are shown in the Mil'I-ta-ry Bulg. 1879 Pr. Alex. I. Nature, like liberty, is but restrain'd plate of DECORATIONS OF HONOR, Under decoration. Na'tivcs of Brit'Ish By the same lawi which first herself nrdain*d. Sec also table below. 10. Social position as a basis of Eastln'dles G.B. 1842 East Ind. Co. Pope Essay on 1. Criticism pt. i, 91. distinction; social rank in general; also, the people of Nl-shan'-i-Im"tI-az'... Turkey 1879 Ab. Hamid II. 2. To appoint and consecrate or set apart for some one social rank; as, the middle order of society. *• NI-shan'-I-Med-JIdl-e. Turkeyl 1850 Sul. Ab. MJd. epeciai work; specifically, in church use, to invest Nl-shan'-I-Os-ma'ni-e. Turkeyy 1861 Sul. Ab. Az. with The humbler instinctively felt that their orderr had Jin Lincoln] 26 Oak Crown Lux.il 1841 Wm. II., ministerial or priestly functions, with the laying lost Its wisest champion. Neth. on of NicoLAY AND Hay Abraham Lincoln O'ce-an'Ic Star Hawaii J 1886 Kalakaua I. hands or other ceremonies; as, to ordain an elder. vol. X, ch. 18, p. 345. [c. CO. '90.] Pole Star S.&N5 1748 Frederick I. Thouifh a priest's son, he (John the Baptist] was virtually a lay- 1 1 . A class or kind of a common degree or grade of ex- Red Ea'glen Prussia 1705 Geo. Wm. Brd. man, for he had not been duly ordained. cellence; as, wit of tlie first order. 33 Re-deem'er'6 GreeceU 18-29 Government Oeikie Li/e o/ Christ vol. 11, ch. 118. '80.] 39, p. [A. Rose (Im-pe'ri-al) Brazllll 1829 Pedro I. It is poetry of the highest order: but it is also sober fact. R. Vl Dom in ^^ Roy'al A-lner'f-ean, of St. To place order; arrange. [< F. ordonner, < L. Philip The Marys, Emblems of Holiness p. 102. [c. £ BROS. '57.] ordino, set in order, < ordo (ordin-), Is'a-bel'la the Cath'- order.] 1 2. In the Roman Catholic, Anglican, Greek, and Srnonrms: see install; institute. other o-Uc Spain Ferd VII. churches: (1) i>l. The clerical oflice; as, to be in orders. Roy'al Crown of Ha- — or-dal n'a-bl(e. a. Capable of being appointed wal'l Hawaii I Kalakaua 1. The rector . . . only went or ordained.— or-daln'er, n. 1. One wTio ordains. into orders because there was the liv- n, ing ** Rue Crown Saxony I. ready for him. T. Hughes Totn lirown at Oxford vol. i, Fred. Aug. 2. JSiir/. Ilinl. One of the nobles ch. whom Edward II. was 17, p. 279. [T. 4 r. '69.] Saint Alex. News'ki... Russia! Emp. Cain. compelled to emiwwer to enact ordinances. Saint An'drew Russia (2) A grade of sacerdotal office; " Peter the Gr. as, minor orders. (S) Saint George The Ordatners had not loitered over their work. Six Bav.* E. Chs. Albert Ordi- The rite or sacrament of ordination : usually nance* had been in the pin- le Saint Greg'o-ry the poblished and confirmed by the kinif IFklward II 1 ral. (4) Hence, some other rite or sacrament: as, the Great ••early aa Angtut 2, 1310. 8TUBB8 Constitutional Hist. Eng." HS.* Greg. XVI. »oL li, ch. 1«, p. 32). \cu v. "VS.] order of confirmation. 13. In classical architecture, 31 Saint Hu'ltert Bavaria Grh. V. Rvnsb. the general character of a column and its parts (base, ' Saint J ohn of Je-m'sa- — or-dain'ment, n. The act or state of ordination; lein shaft, and capital, together «ith the entablature and its Rome Juo. Ptr. Alxr. de«tiny. Saint Man'rice and Iiarts) as distinguishing a style of architecture; hence, or'de-al, Sr'dg-ol, n. 1. Anything that severely tests Saint I.az'a-rusi6 Italy Amadeus VIII. the style of architecture in keeping with any given style courage, strength, patience, conscience, etc.; a trying 22 Saint MI'chael and of column and entablature. Usually, there are consid- course of experience. 2. A medieval form of judicial Saint George" G.B. George III. ered to be five orders of classical architecture — Doric, 40 Saint O'laf S. &N.I Oscar I. trial wherein supernatural aid was invoked in the place Ionic, Cortnthian, Tuscan, and Composite; but the last two 7 Saint Pat'rick G.B.;Ir. George III. K>fa, firm, gsk; at. fftre, ifccord; elgmfint, jr = oyer, 61ght, | = ugoge; tin, machine, g = renew; obey, n6; not, n«r, at«m; full, rule; bot, bSm; aUle; orderd 1239 ordoniiance

and cuBtom; as, an ord^rlrf arrangement. 4. MU. (1) Pertaining to orders or their execution; as, an orderly book, ci) Uaving charge of the execution of regula- E tions or orden*; as, an orderly officer. § Synonrms: see neat. Phrases: —orderly book (J/^jV.), a company book In whicli urUffs iirt' n-corded.— officer (Mil.), tue officer 'A o. whose turn it is to luuk afti-r the dM8I6; sM?a4. Modi- prade: full, rm or(//««/r«. tj. A soldiers* mess. Fab- person low or rank, fled- 1 1M»- « 1725, 1RI5. M7; » 1«H, '81; * 1864: 5 1693; ' IMU BOW MU. Emyc. 3. A of common e isih • 1MB; 10 1886. *H7: U 1887; » 174U, 18H>. *42; 14 1712, IS«I; A man whom you and I know to be a wretched ordinaire. « ISS3, *&: W 18S1, *37. *5R; " 1S50; »» 1855; » 1748; » 1866, '75. Thackeray Roundabout Papers, Small Beer p. 156. [E. * L. '91-1 "TO; n 1S40. '65; a W08. "E. 4. A regular meal; ordinary. See ordinary. 1 (3>. Synonyms: command, direction, Injunction. Instruc- or'dl-nal, Sr'di-nal, a. 1. Denoting position in an or- :

ordonnant 1340 organic

•r'don ''''•'S')"'';- [F] RelAtlng to ordonnance; O're-o-doii'ti-da;, 0-re-o-den'ti-dt ordiUS^ilT?""!' ";, or -d6, n. nl. Mam Wnatlon or composition pedals or pistons, operating several An early Tertiary fanufy of o„,„ivoro»8 •an/oda:ctvl^ stops at once, (5) couplers (see oroax-coipler, Or 'do W'tlio yr"flc";?ZT'r"}w Of o. n-.. below) ii'":^„VU"";.*' rV\fL"S-,.?J:.A'??-,.. '^1°L,^': havingig the upper molars seleuodont, fourth nremolaripremolars (S) the swell and sforzando pedals, and (4) the tremulant taining to the series of Lower Silurian rxx'ks, someUuiee The supply different from molars, and lower canines like adjoining of compressed air Is regulated by bellows, also Including the Upper I'amhrian strata: worked In an indefinite premolars, a vertt'brarterial small organs by hand, and In larger by power and canal : C'otulo/nflje. [ < ' term. [< ^>/-(/drt<'f>'. ancient Celtic tribe in Wales.] Or- generally a hydraulic or electric motor or a gas-engine Obeodon.]— o're-o-dont, a. & n.— o'^re-o-Aon'- do'vl-an;.— Or^do-Tl'clan, n. 2. .K piirtial organ. See note above. 3. A musical in- ttd, n.— ©"re-o-doii'told, a. & n. or^dure, Sr'jur or Srd'yOr, n. Excrement, especially as strument resi-mbling or having some mechanism resem- ' • ->- , ""'•'-•'-'fnpli'ic, etc. Same as orooraphic. etc. ..„„ t„^ r^«. J' " disgusting and offensiveive; dunfung. feces [OF.,'"" ' bling the pipe-organ. Specifically: reed-organ. rt Omlth. A subfamily of cracoid birds having the cere & UM. Any part of an or- Covered, filled, or detiletl with ordure.— ganism, plant, or animal performing or'dn-rous, densely covered with ferect velvet-like feathers conceal- some definite func- a. Having nature onhire; tion ; as, the digestive organs. the of filthy aiid oflfensive. ing the nostrils; mouutjiin-curassows. 0"re-o-plia'- ore>. Or, ». A natural substance, sometimes forming We find every organ of sense, with the exception sis, n. (t. g.) [ < OREO- + Gr. J'hasis, river in Greece.] of that of part of a rock, contAiiiing one or more metals. The term touch, more perfect in brutes than in man. Charles is applied usually to a mineiral from which the metal can Bell The Hand ch. 7, p, lid, [h. '40.] o"re-os'el-Iii, O're-es'el-in, n. C/iem. A crystalline be profitably extracted, is 5. An instrument or but compound (C„H„0), formed bv the action of alcoholic agency for communication of the sometimes extended views of a person or also to potash or acids on peiicedanin, 'wliieh yields resorcin bv party, or for the announcement and non-metallic publication of official minerals; as, sul- decomposition. [< Gr. oreoselinon, mountain-parsle.y, acts: especially, a newspaMr or mrore. penodical published < wyw, mountain, + «-«/i«on, parsley.] in the interest' of some political party or religious denomination. • ,'" y^'"^*" o"re-o-8o'ina, O'rg-o-sO'ma, n. pi. A berycoidean J^k T™?* '° "i" °'=™'»<= fl* (g«>"8 Oremoma) with The drama at Athens was. in some sort, what the ™£'™ "fSL"™,; tu?',:^ "1^ tuberculated under publie press is surface. OUEO- Gr. with us, the orffan of political parties. pea™ tote unknown in Sicily. [< + «5ma, body.] Keiohtley Greece pi. ii, ch. 16, p. 367. [H. G. i to. '39.] KoscoK AND ScHoRLEMMER o"re-ot'ra-g;Iii(e, O're-et'ra-jin, a. Of, pertaining to, 6. Phren. A part or ^^'^n\^"'P'""' '' vol- '• P- or designating a group of antelopes (genus Xnnotragus) area of the brain to which a special having lateral mental function is assigned; the seat of a siieciflc r .*,', 'i , hoofs and no tufts on the knees. r< power AS. ore.] <>''. K «c, obeo- -4- Gr. ^rai/os, goat,] faculty. 7. [Archaic] Any instrumental agency by brown •ron^ same which ore, 0"res-te'an, o-res-tf'an, a. Of or pertaining to Orestes, some work is done or end accomplished; an in- asGOETHiTE.— Cliiitou orc, son of Agamemnon, noted in Greek strument or tool: chiefly in figurative use; as, political a red fossiliferous iron ore of legend for the con- test between spies are the organs of despotism. the Clinton formation of tlie him and his friend l^ylades, son of Truth haa United States, with lenticular Strophius, in which each claimetl the privilege not single victories; all things are its organs — not Ore-sUmps. only dust and stones, . jrralns. Called -also dyestoiie, of sacrificing his life to save the other; hence, but errors and lies. EMERSON Essays Spiritual Lairs hrst 1. A 8h>ani''stainp: b, cast- fOHSil, orJlajcseed ore.— corvki self-sacrificing; friendly. m series, p. 125. [H. M. A Co. '90.] iron bed. resting on rubber and ore, a curved lamellar variety ore'weed", ^r'wld", n. Same as oarwsed. ore'- 8. [Rare.] The human voice, considered as a musical the wooden mIU (»). to pre%'ent of Ilver«colored cinnahar from wood"t. instrument. jar; c, et^am-cjiinder, 9t. Any musical instroment, as a pipe. the Idria, Austria,— crou'iore". ore'}', ralv^ of which are operated a. Same as ory. l< L. organum, < Gr. organon, instrument; cp. w. tLocal,EnK.I First quality '^ eroon. the ^ * by elliptical gears («•); /. tin ore, cleaned for smelting.— work.] ?**'"'^ graphic ore, same as syl- Synonyms: see part. nnc£!^£!!!iT;"'foed-wat«r; m,™ mortar. 2. vanITF"'^"^^"•^ — n-rn v nvt>. Rnmp asna Phrases, etc.: - A aiamtMhAtt^i-v /• coma, u ttraj «i e, »mne expressive orsan, a harmonium; A^t«Di.-batt«rj. ccams, «, - cHALCociTK. green lead also,asweIl.orKan.-lull o., see n-LL.-Breat or grand ^ • as o., the principal , ^ , ore, same pyromorphite. imrtlal organ of a nlpe.organ, contalnInK — horse. flesh ore, same as bornite.— kidney ore, a the more Iinportantflue-work.-hyrfraulic JIdney.shaped mass gan o. 1. Anor- of liernatllc.— niasnetic ore, a black whose bellows Is operated by a hydraulic motor. 2. An hard ore Is that magnetic, as magnetite.— mercurial ancient organ whose alr-supplv was furnished or regulated horn ore, same as ialomel. — nioclt ore, same as In some way by water.-Jacobson's spiiALEKiTK.— o., a tubular glandi- ore'=bod"y, n. The vein, lode, lens, or form structure of unknown formation found In the anterior mass In which ore Is part of the found. — ore.crnslier, n. A ma- nose of many animals and In the human fetus- chine for breaking up masses of ore, usually preiious to nauied from L. L. Jacobson (17a3-lW3), an anatomist of stamping. Co- See lllus. under crusher. —oresclirrents, penhagen.- or'BBn=al.bu"niin, n. Albumin that fonns H.pl. Oeol. Aqueous solutions of ores circulating through a part of the solfd tissues of the body.— o.;bench, n the earth's The crust.— ore.hearth, n. iEng. & Scot.! A scat, commonly a wooden bench, on which an organ-player small blast-furnace forsmeltlnK lead; sits.— ablast-heartb.- ore. o.. bird, H. 1 . A Tasinanlan crow-shrike {Giiintio- mil, n. A stamp-mill or i|uartz.mlll. rlanaorgamiiim See lllus. under ) having a discordant note. 2. A ^outh. OUARTZ.MILL.- ore.puckel, ». Isolated American wren An and limited ( VyphorMmis cuukuik ) noted for Its — deposit song of rich ore — ore.separator, u. A cradle, frame, o.sblo wer, n. A man or a motor that operates the bellows jlglrtng-inaehlne, washer, or other device or machine used of an organ.— o. .coupler, ii. A device for JolninK keys In separating In the metal from broken ore. or ore from an organ so that when one Is struck the corresponding worthlcds key rock.— ore.slnmp, n. A machine for reducluK In another manual or octave Is depressed.— ores by stamping. o.. fish, w \ The most familiar form Is the stamj). scla-nid, as a druinflsh.-o..jrrinder, n. The player of a battery, and the latest the powerful band.organ: so steam.stamp. See lllus. called because such an organ is played by above.- pri 1 1 ore. 1 . bee prill, n., turning a I. •£. Large pieces crank.— o. gun ( 07-(/««)irc). an orgue: so called and grains of solid dressed ore.— round ore, same as leap. from the arrangement of Its barrels In a row side by side ore.- sott ore, an easily decomposed hematite found resembling the pipes In an orgnn.-o.=barnioninni. chiefly In the Menominee n. (Lake Superior, V. S.) ranKC A powerful reed.lnstrument used as a substitute for a pipe- ore>, n. IProv. Eng.] Same as sea.wrack. organ; alargeandresonantharmonlum.— o.!liue, ii Same •re", n. IProv. Eng.] Fine wool. as OROEis.— o..lol"l, n. A loft or gallerv containing an fc're*, u're, orpin Its n. [Sw.l A Swedish coin; also, a Scandi- and apiiurtcnances, especially In' a church — o. navian unit of value. See coin. pi torn, a structure In the cochlea of mammals contain- ore*t, «. Grace; favor; honor; glory. ing the rods of (Jorti and ore't, n. Same as oar, the hair-cells that serve for transmission of ore. Or, adv. & prep. Over: misspelling for o'er. sound- ore-. Same &» qbeo-. vlbratlons to the cochlear nerve.- o're-ad, O'rg-ad, ». o. of «;iraldeN, Class. Myth. A mountain nyniph. a remnant See NVMPH, and compare of the Wolflian drvad, naiad, etc. body composed of a col- Ct- She was of the Oread's baxom race, lectlon of closed tubes, That baant the hilltops nearest to the nun. found near the testis; the Bclwkr-Lytton Itiat Tales of Miletus. paradidymis.— o.ot'iwol- Oread's Son et. 27. iri, a snlndle-shatied body [< Gr. oreias (preiad-), < oros, moun- found In tendons and be- tain.] lieved to be an end-organ of the nerves.— ©"re-a'la, n're-fl'la. n. [Sp. Am.] A kind o, of of clay used in the manufacture of pottery RosenniUIIer, the par- In British Guiana. ovarium— o. of Sein- a problematical glan- o-ree'tlc, o-rec'tic, a. Of or pertaining Ser, ular strncturi' found In to the appetites or .^x. n ,„ . desires; apjjetent; gastropods, formerly con- 'he Organ of Cortl. motive: said esiieciallyof the natural tend- sidered olf;ictory.—'o. of Section of the cochlea of the ear: encies of the soul as distinguished from ?Syrski, the reproductive ", scala vestibuli, b, scala tynipani; the moral. Gr. organ of the male eel: c, scala media, or cochlear duct; rf, [< orektikm, < A Cross-section of a Pipe-organ, desire.] discovered by the Italian organ of Corti; e, branch of audi- o-rec'tlv(eJ. o, console, supporting three banks of manual keys — (1) choir, (2) (treat, (S) naturallst SyrskI In 1878.— ^'^ nerve; /, gangUon spirale. Anstotle the swell; 6 pedal key,; c. bellows; d, drew distinction between the reservoir; c, e, feedem; /, /, boies cSntaiiing n. pneumatic levers for o.. piano, A meloplano.— o..pipe, n. One of the NoeUc power on the one hand, and the Orective the ^reat orL-nn and swell-organ; g, g. g, roller-boards; h, oon- the auclor for front pipes sounding-pipes of a pipe-organ, a lonjt tuiie In which a col- S>wer on other. McCoSH PHychologu, Mo- (j, 1); ,;,,;, wind-cheste; *, pedal wind-chmt; i, shutters; m, eweu-box. umn of air Is made to vibrate so as to ve Powers gen. intro., p. 1. (s. '87.] See illus. of a reed-pipe, under REED. produce a tone of definite pitch. Or^ran-plpes are of two types: (1) Jtue-pipes. Or'e-Kon grape*•, A''™'.'""'hyshrub(i?er6ert«rene»s, In which the vibration . •-, - orfi.Srf.n. The cultivated eolden varietv of the id rnlh-d Is Induced bv a fluttering current of var.r. AqutM„mi)olAquif(/li the Pacific air coast of the United SWtes also e flowers, and the shining, - - former, which may open or slopped, are dark-green, holly-like leaflets of- orTan, n. Orphan.- Phil. Soc. obtained the characteristic Its pinnate leaves; also, one of it« orpan-tone, the flute-tone, and glaucous, dark-purple, or'fe"vert, n. A Koi.imiltb. the strlUK-tone.- round lierries. o,.pipe coral, a tubfporold coral con- Cwed aim hoUyleavedt barberrybarberry. orfelldt, n. Old .sn.ron Lain. A payment for or restitution sisting of cylindrical ' tubes placed side ' ' . ly u»ariicuiJiny cuitiej „ - - jan i Hfsrwi „. taken away. by side and united by horizontal floor- or'fraist, ;*. Same as oupiirey. northwestern America, slatC' or'lraystt or'freyst. like expansions,- o.. point, n. or'frayt, n. osprey. A colored alxive and orange- The passage in which the tonic or dondnant or'ffalt, n. Same as arool. brown lielow, with a black {sometimes both) Is prolonged bv the or'Bant, r.l. To organize; furnish with organs. collar in the male. bass, white other parts mpve without Oregon or'pian, ©r'gan, ?*. bird;. 1. A musical wind-instrument con- apparent reference to it.- o. .screen. taining a collection of wooden or metallic pipes made ". In cathedrals or great churches, o're-ide, n. Same as oroide. to sound by means of compressed air from a screen or partition on one side, or •"relflAre'. O'rf-lySr', n. bellows, and played upon by means of keys. Called In England at the western end of the I K.I Archeol. 1. The car- also pipe-organ. choir, built of wood or stone hiKlily piece In a medieval helmet. In the organ the pipes are of various kinds; namely, mouth pipes ornamented, and supporting an organ, "2, Her. A pillow or cushion open and stopped, and reed pipes with apertures of various shapes. often a secondary organ.— o.. iM'neath the heads of recum- Ganot Physics tr. by Atkinson, t 280. p. 25*. [w. w. '90. slop, J 11. A stop of an organ. See stop.— twrnt effigies. Large organs are made up of smaller systems of pipiw, pneumatic o. 1. An organ with Organ . pipe Coral o"rell"lette', 5'rS'lyef, called partial organs, each of which Is n. connected with a ( pneumatic .action. 2. An organ In Tiihipora mu- Arrhf.ol. 1 , A covering for separate keyboard. Earh partial organ has several sets of which wind only is used. Compare hy sicft). 1/2 the ear. In medieval armor. pipes called stops. Each stop has Its own characteristic -Z. nRAfLic ORGAN, 2.— portative o.. originally, a portable An arrangement of the quality of tone, and each Is capable of bi'lnc: hair thrown Into or pipe-organ; recently, - .. a reed-organ.. positive o., an or- In braids, as covering the ears. out of connection with Its keyboard by the movement of „ , , , gan fixed In place, as distinguished from a portative organ; I F., < OF. oreillele. L. an- a knob operated by the organist. The keyboards < are (1) also, especially, a cbtilr-organ. ricula: sec aleicle,] mimnals, played with the bands like that ' a". The Oregon Robin. rell^iet't. arrangedih steps, (me above anotiief, wben'there arcMiiwe «';'san-«ly, Sr'gan-di, n. A very fine translucent muslin than one, and (2i a peiliil ki'vlioiird, dress-goods, often having figured patterns. [< F. or- o-reiain, o-rel'in, n. Chem. A .yellow coloring-matter in idaycd with the feet A large church organ iisiuilly lias llire.-'partlal organs, the gondi, book-muslin.] or'gail-dlej. annatto, regarded as a decomposition product of bixin. ffreat oriran, the swelhorifn n. ;ui(l the choir.or- or'atan-ert, ». An organist. 1 < OreUana, specific name of the amotto-trc-e ] Ban I large concert ..rgans a fourth, have called the solo, or-gan'lc, 6r-gan'ic, a. 1 . BM. (1) Of. pertaining to, oreo-, ore-. Derived from Greek oros, mountain: com- o/K""!™^. or animals and .planU; bining forms. nC!lj.rf?om?he'";he?s""iiie^\' orVllV*!;^^ SiL'iL*! ."."il'.-.fl a having or consisting of organs; as. organic remains. o're-o-don,(3'r^-o-den, W. (o-rl'- C. E. I.), n. 1. An compass of live octa\('8. rantrlriK from tlie c l>elow the tenor The various livinR oreodontoid mammal, found fossil in the C. The pednlsorKiiii has a (aKs commonly of thintrs. or thos* which have posse«aed life. Rocky Moun- notes, compose The Oruanic World. tains. 27 ranprfnir from iht- (; Im'Iow the htwest manual il 2. [0-] A genus typical of OreodontiUse. [< Asa Field*H<><>k Sf^e oiKiAN-piPK ami other conipoumls and Gray of Botany lesson i, p. 1. [i. b. * co. '68.] ORE- (ir. odous (odord-), Umtli.] phrases helow. + The mechanical action the of or^an Is aided by (1) com- (2) Of, pertaining to, or affecting an organ or organs; as. •ofa, fflrra. gsk; at, fire. Record; el§nifint, gr = ov

organic 1341 oriel

organic diseases. (3) Sening the purpose of an organ. organized or living 1)eing; an animal or plant. 2. The an organ or organs, especially those of touch, taste, and J. I'kefn. Containing carbon as an essential Ingredient: state of Ijeing organized; also, any organ. 3. Anything smell. 2. Susceptible to an impression; plastic. [< ori^iiiallv confined to carbon compounds in organisms. that has a structure or functions analogous to those of ORGANo- 4- Gr. l^ptikos^ < lambartd (lab-), take.] At flrst the term organii; was applied only to coni- a physical organism; as, the social organism, or"gaii-ol'o-5!:y, Sr'gan-el'o-ji, h. 1. The science of founds whose funnatloo was supposed to be due to vital — or'''gau-la'iuaI,a. Of, pertaining to, or produced organs; especially, the branch of biology that treats of it was j-o used uutil IS28, when WohkT artlflclally orce, and bv living organisms: as, organismal fermentation. organs of tne body. 2, The scientific treatment of any- prepared urea, a distinct product of animal life. The term or'ifan-iiit, Sr'gan-ist, n. 1 . One who plays theorgan; thing considered as structural or organic; as, the DM continued to expand in its meaning until at present any organ- specitically, line of demarcation between oivanie and inorganic com- the official player of a church organ, "i. In ology of literary style. 3. Phrenology, as teaching; that pounds is arbitrary rather ttuu natural. the middle ages, a singer "who accompanied the plain- everjf elementary or primary mentalfaculty haa its or- A useful prsctical distinction betwe«n organic and tnor^nic song with another part, oi^gaii-fzerj. 3. A tana^er gan in the brain. [< okgano- + -logy.] — or"gan- flab«tance« is afforded b; their behaviour when heated. An orffauic (genus EuphoniaV. especially, E, mugicay from its music- o-loff'lc or -Ic-al, a.— or"gaii-ol'o-gl8t, «. «ib6t«Dce is either oooTerted into vapoar when moderatelj- heated, al powers. [< LL. organigta, < L.organum; see or- or"ga ii-o-iiiet-al'llc, Sr'gan-o-met-al'ic, a. Chem. or is decomposed into volatile prodacts, Kenerally leaving a Tvn- doe of charroat which bams awaj when heated in air. gan.] or'gan-lst>ert. Of, pertaining to, or denoting a combination of an or- C, L. Bloxam Chemistry 5 314, p. «*. [P. B. * co. '».] or^ffa-niKi'ta, Sr'gu-nls'ta, n. fSp.] One of various South- gjinic radical with a metallic element. American wrens. Compare oroan-bikd. 3. Forming or i>elonging to a system or organized or'ira-uon. flr'aro-nen, n. [Gr.] 1, A system of rule« and or^j^ii-is'tlc, Sr'gan-is'tic, pertaining whole: characterized by correlation and cooperation of a. Of or to an f>rlnciple8 considered as an Instrument of guidance; specif- organist or an organ. cally [0-], the logic of : so called by his disciples. parte; organize*!: systematized. or"^a-nl8'truni, Sr'ga-nis'trtnn, n. A large hand- The Organon of Aristotle and the Oraanon at Bacon stand in Society is many and is one: and the orvani'c unity of the state is organ of the hurdv-gurdy relation, but the relation of contrariety; tne one considers the laws reconciled with the aeparate existence of each of its mem- type. [< Gr. organon, or- to be under which the subject thinks the other the laws under which the bers. BaSCEOFT Cnitfd Statea vol. v. ch. 4«, p. "0. [h, B. ft CO.] gan.] object is to be known. K.-F. Vocab. Philos. ^.S^. [8H. *CO.] or*Ban'i-tr+« n. Organization; organism. 4. Acting ajs a means or instrument of formation; con- or'^gan-l*za-btri-ty, 6r"gan-ai'za-biri-ti, n. The iJt, An orKim or Instrument. oWffa-nuint* stitutive; regulative; as. the constitution is the orffanic — the second part of Bacon's capability of being organized; also, the capability of be- Novum Orsrnnon, Lord law of tlie stale. 5. Characterized by lawsHke those of "Instauratlo Masna," aavocatlng Induction as the true ing converted into organisms or organic matter. life; not mechanical; as, social prepress is orffanic. 6. method of sclentitic Inquiry- the new (or inductive) orga- — or'2£aii-fza-Dl(e. a. or'8i^n-VHa-bl(eX. Phiiot. ix-pendinc on structurt^ fundamental; not acci- non, as dlstingulslied from the old (Aristotelian or deduct- or'Ban-i''zaiet, «. Provided with organs; organized. ive) organon: title dental or fortuitous; as, organic growth or development. a given by Bacon himself. or'^iieau-l-za'tlun, Sr'gan-i-ze'shun, n. 1. The act or'ffan*pipe", o.^mtopf etc. See organ. Thit ... is what is meant by the phnuies ' organic i^rowth, or- or process of organi;sing, or the state of being organizeti. or'vnn-ry, fir'ganri. n. [Kare.j The music of the organ, ganic developownt,* as applied to Isng-uat^. A langiiaKe, like an constituting organism or that which resembles It. onutnic body, is DO mere atfvreeat^- of kimilar particles; it is a (1) The m an by a process of murst cv^inplt-x of related and mutuliy helpful parts. W. D. WhTTNET development and growth. (2) The systematic anion of If tthe poetize, let her lay her mind ... to such sound and rintrinj; orgaitry nsComus. D.G. MITCHELL Kft'er/e«o/a Bach- Lang, and Studli nf iMng. lect. ii. p. «. t»- *74-l individuals in a bo/it, < Ht. organikog^ < organon^ organ.] bers work together for a common end; as, the organiza- or'ga-uiDl, n. Biol. One of the cells or or-Kaii'Ic-ai;. tion of a convention. or'sa-nulo, elements of an organ. Synonyms: see kadical. The length of the war and Its wont hardships had been chiefly — uricHuic aualyais* the analjrils of a compound con- due to want of organization. or'ga-iiuiii, Sr'ga-num, n. [L.] 1. Same as organon. FlSKB Crit. Ptriod Am. Biat. ch. 2, p. U. [H. M. * ro. '90.] 2. Mug. (1) An organ. (2) The metiieval diaphoiiy. 2. That which is organized. (1) An animal or vegetable or^gaii-yH, m. An organ; Instrument, or'tfan-iet. Of'«a-ny*t, n. Same as okujan. ori^niam. (2) A number of individuals systemntically or'^ait-zliile, Sr'gan-ziu or 6r"gan-zin', vi. To form united for some end or worlc; as, a military organiza- organzine. tion; a church organization. or'^an-zlnCe, n. 1 . A silk thread made of several sin- No city in the world can diow soch a band of Christias philan- thropists, or sw^ organizations of benevolence, as London. T. L. fie threads twisted together; thrown silk: used chiefly CUVLEB From the A'He to Nonray ch. 29. p. 380. [c. a BROS. '82. or warp. 2. A fabric made of such thread. 3. The set, arrangement, or structure of parts or organs Organzine wan principally made within the dominions of Savoy, by means of a large and curious engine, the like of which did not by which an animal or vegetable body performs it* func- exist elsewhere. SMILES Men of Invention, Lotnbe p. 10». [h. '86.] tions, or by which a society of hidividuals is prepare*! ^3^miviMaBww wifto rc^iic^4«^B, wwhb^u^^ vvff^vn^JBQ ISTfW* for systematic cooperation: applied also to any combina [< F. organMn, < It. orgaiizino., organzine.] \ i'paratus for and purifyiBC ana air. eoMwiiic of dryiaff osnaa tion of parts or powers; as, ttie organization of a fish, or'saam, Sr'gazin, n. 1. Immoderate excitement or >m and tube* coBtjUaioff fra^ncato of poiaaiiBM ajdfoxid and l)ehavior. 2. Med. Extreme excitation and turgescence ehlorid. 3. bust kHk»tabe in eonbostkm*farBae«. 4. of a department^ or of the mind. or''g:<^ii-l-Ma'llon^. t;aki«n Com of an organ; especially, the height of venereal excite- GalclaaMcbkNid tube. osmI for oollectiu the brdroffvn (as water) The miad. the virit, is the end of this living organization of to ba weighed. 5. Potaah«b«db contaiiiutg a sofalloe of poteaninm fledi aad booss, of nerves andmnsdes. ment in coition. [< Gr. orgad, swell, be eager.] '83.; byritosU. ued for collecclag the carboa - ' ''-i-ipen. and oxysr*-" '-'"T-fonally nl- government. tioners and druggists as a flavor or a mild demulcent. II "i"' compound rrom red» He U the best pastor wbo organitea aad draws oat the greatest or^e-i»« Ar'J^ls, n. A fish, a large kind of ling. oWsani

li • times aldf»l t>f pure working capacity of his church in harmonioos action. llaa'^t. *84.] i,\ iroffen Is oxl'ii : Mi;eu mon- J. K. HoPFiN PtiMtoral Theology | », p. KM. [r. A w. or'^ifi-aa'llc, Sr'ji-as'tlc, a. Pertaining to or resem- f\ irbon to carbon dl"Xld (. When «ul- committees, etc. 3. Bid. To fomish with organs or The orgiattie feaata of the heathen still drew to themselves fi> ' preaeni. they are oxlalz<^^ Into snt- parts mutually dependent on and essential to life; endow Chriatiaa disciples {at Corinth), in temples defiled with every lust. f<> I'loa and aetennined as such. If the 8TOBB8 Div. Orig. Christianity lect. viii. p. 250. [ran. a. h. *8i.1 (-• 'iieasttarcborstwrar. It Is tboroughly with life; form as an organism: commonly in the past qf

dr 1 in a veH»4-l r>f plAtftiiiiii or pun-t-taln, participle; as, organiMd (or living) ferments. 4. MWt. [< Gr. orgiastU^, < orgia, orgies.] or'elct.

*-:i i ; .' I;IH> To arrange or render In parts ; as. io organize the Te Denm. or'nclea, fir'jiz, n.pl. [or'gy, dng.\ 1. \V ild or wanton

ot ; ..-d »; II. i. To unite in an orgunization or society; join in revelry; can>usal; debauch: in this sense used also in :i.ll. reciprocal and correlHtive relations and duties. the singular. 2. CIom. A?itiq. The secret rites in honor c.r Ml ciT. ill. I. .>....< i- M. M. > ..jiric One of Matthew Arnold's clear-thinking Yankees has said, with of certain Greek and Roman deities, especially those tt\ hnt by lilt- buniem of iln- f nrna<-e i3). ligraramatic brevity, that whenever three Americaas get together Ti. > heated and oxidized by tin- uxyKcn practised by the worshipers of Dionysos or Bacchus. organize. tlir 21? fr- , after ff.s p;i»>uk'!i juirlfy- Pythagoras . . . directed his disciples, in their orgies or secret OakKKKon Triumphant Democracy ch. 18, p. Alft. [s. '88.] lii. i^h worship, to practise grmnastica, dancing, music. L. organum; see organ.] or'gan-laet* *78.] t>i I lie [< I>BAPEa iafe/2. Deva. Europe vol. i, ch. 4, p. 118. [u. Synonyms: w* institutk. [F., < L, orgia, < Gr. orgia^ secret rites.] 1. One wbo organizes; In i-d or'ican-l''zer,dr'gan-ai'zOT, n. Synonyms: see carousal. ti, 'i.-d as, be is a bom oryanixtr; Shakespeare was the greatest orirne, drg, n. [F.] Mil. 1, A firearm consisting of several at 'Ion organizer of the dnuna. St. Same a« oboanut, 2. musket-barrels arranged to be fired simultaneously or near- o: into o rga n -I '^ae rt ly so: tiie precursor of the mitrailleuse, organ irunt* c-.v l.iilh (5t or'ganilinff'^, o.iloft, etc. Sec organ. 2, Medieral Fort. One of several heavy timbers pointed ail rid (prevl- oruano-. Lk-rivci from i'trecV.orgauott. organ: acom- with Iron and arranged above a gateway or entrance, to ijd '11 the com- l>e used as a portenllls. pi' kiid a cur- Imilng form.— ur''K»n"On'*>-niy, n. The laws of or- of these or"gui-n«'He'. fir'gl-net', n. A reed-lnstrmnent In which r»-ir >: ,. n-tidK' ganic llfe^ or the ncli-nce treating laws, or^ffan- i by — air-preHMire 1h iidrnltted to the reeds through paiMT so per- t'l- ' II the •-no'nii-at.— or'^KHn-o-nom'tc* «. or'gan -o- ni' at>- foniti'd as to nrndnce In Us passiige the notes In sequence of ,'!'.<': «. | Itare.] Th»' te«-hntc:d namf of an organ.— or"- Pi>T .Ill rlie In- nym* a tune. Tlie tiellows and motion of the paper strip are con- cr>i-' lice ffaD««*Byn'ir, ar^an-o-nyHi'lc-nl, «.— or^gnn- of urgiins.— trolled by a crank. [Dim. < organ.] r A. •a'y-aiTt n. Mot. The norM''n<-I«nin* or"- Ih _-tD or'KUlt, n. Pride. a. Proud; "-: n. Med. The tn-HtiiH-ni of dlneiwhy rem- or'gelt.— or'KU-ionMt, sn...... -i.;^ ... *...! edles derJred from onrans corn-BponrilnK cheiiii<*i I . hon > er'ji, n. Singular of orgies. or*'gan-o»phon'ic, (t. oi^Sty. coniiHMiiitin ^<«.t^^ • iii^Mix I K> . itnd ok«*a.h1' , i. — •• de* or^gan»e»lhrr'a-pyt.— Sr-jai'ia er'gwi-a, liparid moth, •criitliau of a rnrve, deM-rlptlon with Instruments of Sounding Ilk*' an organ; rem-nibling a muslirHrinstrunirnt In or-Ky'la, or n. A a a plane curve n. ili«fji«e. a dlwnse that affects some t'fTfct: i*aid of a certain porer (genus Orgyia). [< Gr. orgijia., length of the

• Biol. The ptiylogcny or tribal lilstory narttculiir ' ph'y*ly. " arms extended, < orend., stretch out.] organs. r-icaii'l<' --al-ne«a. /*."-or-ican'l- niiiritlun of nrgaiis. — o-rib'a-dd, a. & n.— rlnni. //. That fvsli-m ttf tiit-raiM-utics in which every «r'gan-o-cer'dI-um, «. Muh. An or^gan-o-choT'di-iim, o-rlb'a-told, a. diH*'a(»r in juhtIIk-*! to injury or dft^-rioration of an oriran. Iiifttrnnient roinlMniiig the works and powers of the piano o'ri-bi* n. Same as ourebi. •r-gnn'li*^* n. Thf wli-iu'' of ihe liMinmirntal mmle* of and pipe-organ: suggested by O. F. Vogler. [< oroaNo- or'l-enalc,er'i-calc, n. Un- thoiiKbf: fnHii th*' .\rli"tot*-1|an ubc of ihr word organon. -r Or. r/ionlf, string.) der the Roman empire, an or^iran-lflr. Ar'L'un-if'ic, a. PnKlurlng or operaUng or-aaii'o-iceii, ftr-ran'o-jen, n. Chcm. Any one of the alloy of copiKT and zinc, re- IN -rii or an organ; also, rendmng or- element** carlK)n. hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, and some- gold times sulfur, phosphorus, elc., considered as one of the sembling in appearance; brass. Thert^ was also a r ''OhmIm men-ly of the matter of which It characteristic ingredients of an organic compound. [< white orichalc. ori- '- -• '! .* .- " t. [< L. nja> . . . but of that in con- OIMiANO- + -GEN.] nection w itli i\\- •ir\fiiin '>M-«- 1.1...... i-i. Ui, make.] koK, copper.] < It wa« not till the microscope came into luw for the investigation au'rl- or-Kaii'l-HVr. Ar i:iin i ioi er. n. P/iot. \ solution f>f ori^nlc (ttriiclun* that any intimate knowledge was attained ot rlialr*: or'i -eal«'lie+; for oru'Hiiifyiiii: a M-nHiii/t-d collodion dry plate, the nature of orgtimtgenenia. or' I -<'hal<*lij.- or "I- Brit, ifth ed., vol. %-iii, IM. t>r-tin ii'l-IA riKD; -ry'iNo.l Phot. A. Tiiosisos in Encyc. p. rlial'i'eoiiM, a. Having a genksis.) • r, as album^-n or a «o- 2. Organogeny, f < organ** -f color iM'tween gold and Itrass; — n. >n dry plate, so treated or^iraii-o-ge-nel'ic, or^gan-o-ifen'ic, of or [M'rtaining to orichalc, or^iean-og'e-ny, Sr'gan-oj'e-nl. n. Bufi. 1. The on- firl-cu, n. . it more sensitive. [< or'i-cou. The Nu- togeny nn i-it-

•iu=m; i^obeoUte; X^ varia-ni. J

orleney 1242 oriole

or other work of art, considered with reference to actual The jatiinic onVId from whidi the gremt noWe looked down on o'rl-en-ta'^tor, 0'ri-en-te"t§r, w. Surv. An instru- or potential dupllcutes of or copies from It. Us n*w Italian trarden. nu'iU usotl ill the orientation of a church, or in placing a v .. « « on- i >»a i IHJ.J would iie famous in his art, he must endeavor to Orkkj. Short Hist. Eno. People ch. 7. § 6. p. 3»7. iH. building with reference to the points of the compass. If a painter copy after theo?'(ff(Ho/«of the most excellent masters, CervaNTES 0¥. oriole < LL. orvAum, prob. < L. aureolug; Bee o/|.|.ent-ueHst, ». 1. The st^jte or character of being [< Don Quixote tr. by Jervas, pt. i, bk. iii, ch. 2.5, p. 165. [f. * C] oriel window:. ea^ttrn -i. Orleney AURKOLA-I (3) writing or literary production as flrst produced or or strenjirth of color. erM-fe'shial, a. Of or pertaining w the A o'rl-en.c>4, n. Brightness or"l-fa'clal» published. O'ri-ent, i7. 1, To find or fix the position of mouth and face. [< L. cw (or-), mouth, -\-facies, face.] o^rl'OUl, 2. The language in which a document or book i^ flrst to eaet. and hence to all the jwinta of — orit'Rcial anslp, see craniometry with reference the from it is translated; as, An ormce; aperture. written and which to study the surveying. .-- - the bearings of, as in or'i-fext.. .^- t ; • „ the compass; find — „ •* *u * Scriptures in the original. or'l-ttoe, er'i-fie, «. small opening in o a cavity as tliat hnMing. copied from it. A The OrUTpynimid like the inferior To turn to a translation after peruMing the original ha» been the four wei^ built facing made by a crack or by boring; an aperture, as at the end w•lmort^full?o^.VHf«^ that i». «d^ well compared to looking on the wronij side of a piece ot tapestry. and west. of a pipe Or tube; a veut or perforation. [F., < LL. o?t- exactly north, south, t>a«t. H. Rogers Superhuman Origin of Bible lect. vii, p. 264. [s. '74.] R. A. Proctor «rrt»( Pyfumid,A3trolog\/ p. SIK [caw. '83.] mouth, 4-/ado, make.] fidum, < L. OS {or-}, 3. The source of the existence of a thing; jirimitive east exactly. Eepecially: (1) To ' Synonyms: see hole ft. To cause to face the state or character; origin: in this sense archaic, except arrange the ground-plan of (a church) so that its apse or or"I-li'i-lal. er'i-flch'ol, a. Of or pertaining to the ori- surgery, as applied to a primitive stock whence varieties have been is toward the east. (2) To place (a corpse) flees of the body; as, GnficicU chancel end developed; as, the wild rose is the Ofiginal of the culti- 3. Figuratively, to find or'l^flanime, ©r'i-flam, n. 1. TheI early royal ensign with its feet towartl the east. "" vated rose. the pr(HX'rl>earings or relations of (any mutter or subject), of" France, formerly the red banner of the Abbey of St. Christianity bears all the marks of a divine original. (.one's concei>tion of a thing), by referring to Denis. It is supposed to have been a rwi gonfalon e amused with their folly instead of their wit. Uu victory was that of orient Heht. LL. atiriflamma, < L- aurmn, gold, + Jlamma, flame.] Scott Fortunes of Nigel vol. i, ch. 12, p. 251. |.H. M. * CO.] >Vben the sun's shafts disperse the gloom of nigrht. au'ri-naiiiine^; or'l-flambet. 5t. Ancestry; parentage; iKnligree. CowpKR Ej-postulation at. 23. " see cause; model. or'l-gan, er'i-gan, ^. /. ir. (-gan, C),..„ n.... The wild Synonyms:- - ,• rising, as the morning sun; as^orieni from , . i- » 3. Ascending; marjoram (Oiiganmn mdgare). [F., < L. origanvm, < o-rlg l-iial-i»l» o-rij i-nai-ist, n. One who is original. the grave. [F., < L. onen{t-)s, ppr. of orU>r, rise.] cultivates originality. (Jr. oriqanm,minnn/n < oro.% moiintain, 4- gmm, brightness.] or who o'rl-enl.n. 1. [0-] Those countries, collectively, that - ' o-rij-i-nal'i-ti, n. [-ties, pi.] ^.'l^!fl'"„^ o-rig'a-num, n. /iot. An Old World o-rlg"I-nal'l-ty, 1. . . - rpjjg the eastern Mediterranean and - . begin with Islam on genus of shrubby or ncrbaceous perennial plants of the power of producing new conceptions, inventions^ or preceded the definite article. stretch through Asia: by mint family (Lahiafse). 0. vvlgare, the wild marjoram, works of art or literature; inventiveness. were on the decline In the eii?hth and ninth centuries all studies jg naturalized, and O. Mc0orana, the sueet marjoram, is In the rage for originality the old standards of taste are de- serted or treated with cold indifference. J. SlOET Miscell. Wri- culiivated, in the United states. [L., < GT.ongmmi; uSLS'iJSo Hfaf.Pfci7os.tr. by Morris, vol. >,§ 95, p. 402. ts.'72.] tings, Characteristics of the Age p. 360. [l. b. * CO. '52.] The part of the horizon specially brightened by the 2. Originalness; ils, the o/i^iwrt/i/y of a manuscript. 3. a o^-g^en-lsm, er'i-jcn-izm. n. The system of religious rising sun; the eastern sk>. Thequality of being novel, orof having mental freshness _ _ and philosophical doctrine held by Origen of Alexandria "When, at forthcomingr of the Lord of Day, and vigor; oddity. 4. That which is original. (A. i). 185-253). Ho taught a threetold sense of the The Orient, like a shnne. The public blames originalities. literal, moral, and mystical; the eternal pro- ~ Kindles as it receives the rising ray. Scriptures, ' E. B.. Browning Aurora Leigh bk. iii. I. 71. SouTllEY The Curse of Kehama pt. vii, st. 6. cession of the Son from, but his inferiority to, the Father; _ ._ _ »»•*«-.*j^ l-na|.>-«.->>', 0-rij'i-nal-i, adv. 1. At the beginning luster the value of a pearl de- the preexistence of al! human souls; and the possible or 3. The iridescent on which of the existence of some thing or system; at first; as, the probable ultimate restoration of all fallen beings. pends. or a pearl as i>ofsesging this luster. The allusion universe was onginally a fiery nebula. U to the luster and source of the best pearls. Or'l-seii-ist, er'i-jen-ist, n. Ch. Hist. 1. A follower first three Gospels were missionary Oospels, originally — orient equinoctial, thatpohit at which the horizon of Origen or his teachings. The preached to unfipiritual men. 1). S. (jREGOHY Why Four Oos- and the plane of the earth's equator intersect. The sun js^s divide*'! into two parties,— the Protoktists The OrfffeH were pelsf pt. i, ch. 2, p. 80. [sh. 4 co. '77.] rises there at the equinoxes.— o. eslivnl, the point of the (so called in allusion to the doctrine of the pre-existence of Christ's consequence of an original state or condi- Intersection of the eastern horizon with the tropic of Cancer. soul) or Tetradites, and the Isochrists (so called with reference to 2. [Rare.] In — o. hibernal, the eastern point at which the tropic of the doctrine of the restoration of all souls, and their attainment to tion; from the first; as, man is ongiJuUly rational. 3. Capricorn Intersects the horizon, an absolute equality with Christ). In a new and striking manner; dillerent from that hither- w. '91.] o^ri-eii'tal, O'ri-en'tal, a. 1. [0-] Of or pertaining to S.-H. Relig. Encyc. vol. iii. p. 1706. [F. & to done; as, the battle was planned originally. the Orient; originating in or obtained from the Orient; 2. One of an obscure sect that followed an unknown o.rlg'i-nai-iie»*s, o-rij'i-nal-nes. n. The state or qual- opposed to Occtdenfai. 2. Magnificent; gorgeous; pro- Origen: said by Epiphanius of Constantia to have been \xy of being original; esi>eciaHv. the qualitv or character fuse: from the wealth traditionally ascribed to the Orient. licentious.— Or"I-gen-ls'tlc, a. Of or pertaining to of thatwhich is produced at first hand; originality; gen- I first saw her seated in all the pride of oriental state. Origen or the Origenists; growing out of the views of iiineness; authenticity. W. Ware Zenobia vol. i, letter v, p. 133. [Jas. m. '66.] Origen or his followers; as, the <>>77/7eftU'i!ic controversies. o-riK'i-nant, o-rlj'I-nant, a. (Rare.] Tending to produce^ or'i-Kint, vt. & ri. To originate. originative; originating; espeelally, self-oiigluatlng. 3. [Archaic] Lying in or proceeding from the direc- ,,, - - • ,- .. er'i-jin, commencement of the ex- o-rij'i-ne-ri, a. 1. Causing to exist; tion of sunrise; eastern; as, the oriental part of the sky. Ofr'l-glii, "n. 1. The o-rlg'l-na-ry, **^'"v^I»^J"'! that which be- by origination. 2. Existing at the be- 4. Specially bright, clear, pure, and precious: said of istence of anything; the beginning of characterized gems. 5, Astrm. Ascending between the fourth house comes or is made to be; first stage of life or being; as, ginning; original; primary; primitive, plant at its onjyira is a germ. o-rlg:'l-iiate,o-rij'i-n6t, r. [-xa'teu; -xa'ting.] I. t. and the meridian: said of planets. \F., < h. orie7italis^ the origin of has l>een traced by different writers 1. To be the origin or producing Cause of; make to be < orienit-)^; see orient, a. The government — oriental ainethyi^t, emerald, ruby, topaz, to four sources; divine right, paternal authority, election, and force. or become; especially, to cause or constitute the l>egin- James Monroe People the Sox^reign ch. 1, p. 61. |L. '67.] iee coRVNDrM.— O. region iZoogeog.), a prime division ning or first stage of the existence of; start; create; in- IncludhiK Asia south of the Himalayas and the Malayan 2. The source or ground of the existence of anything, vent or set in progress; as, to oiiginate a reform; man, Islands to the Philijipines, Borneo, and Java. either as cause or as occasion; that from which a thing if he is free, wijyi/ia/** custom. 2. [Archaic] To deduce, — o"rl-eii'tal-ly, adv. In an oriental manner. is derived or by which it is caused; oKptciiilly, that which or to assert to flow, as from some source or origin; us, o'^rl-en'tal, n. 1. [O-J A native or hdiabitant of Asia; initiates or lays the foundation; as, tlie seed is the origin Aristotle originates all knowledge froni perception. person of Asiatic type. 2. a Compare Levantine. A of the plant; sin was the origin of wo. II. i. To begin to be; arise or spring from some origin richly plumaged Asiatic variety of owl-pigeon, character- Once acTinowledge free*will in man, and the origin of evil does or source. [ < L. origo {origin-): see origin.] ized by a white spot u|>on the tail. not lie in God. Synonyms: see b'kgix; institute; produce; propa- Se?~mon8 first series, ser. ii, p. 35. [h. '70.] Crl-en'tal-lsm, O'ri-en'tol-lzm, n. 1. An Oriental Robertson gate. peculiarity of thought, si)eech, or manners, or the dispo- 3. Parentage; ancestry; stock; as, men of noble onjyiw. o-rlg''i-na'llon, o-rij"i-ne'shun, n. 1. The act of sition to adopt Oriental peculiarities. 2. Knowledge of As if the vast services and unquestioned abilities of such a states- originating, or the state of being originated; a beginning, not have illustrated the obscurest oW{/j». or proflciency in Oriental langjiages, literature, etc. man would ^j^ causing to begin; origin; as. the origination of life. MoTLEY./ohrto/fiamet'e/dvol.n.ch.ie.p.aoi. (H. 74.] Crl-en'tal-Ist, O'ri-en'taKist, n. 1. One versed in ^ [Rare.! The point where something originates; start- are the histfjry, literature, and language of the East: opposed 4. Ma*h. A point from which measurements made ine.point; root; as, the oiigination of the optic nerve. is supposed to Occidentalist. 2. An inhabitant or native of the to define position; the point where a line to 3 j&ode of propagation or "production. Orient: Oriental. begin. See axis. o. Anat. (1) The end of a muscle that ,,.^lg/j.„j^.(|y^e^ o-rij'i-na-tiv, a. Having power or is ui action: opposed Cri-eii-tal'i-tyt, «. The quality of being Oriental or of ie usuallj^ fixed when the muscle gj^jf^ jq originate; creative.— o-rlg'i-na-tlvte-ly, risinK in the Orient. to insertion. See illus. under muscle. (2) The point at ^^p,, i„ ^ manner tending to originate. 0"rl-en'tal-lze, O'ri-en'tal-oiz. vt. To make Oriental; which a nerve-branch leaves the brain or the spinal cord ^.pj„/|.,,j,/^l— ' *- " •- —:..-* " m„ ,^.,t,.,i :r.« be^un.h«.,„« the position of with reference to the east; orient. 2. To nat«d or o-rlrloii, o-ril'en, //. Foii. 1. A small rounded pro- the altar end of a church a slight inclination to- o-rl{^'l-naI, o-rij'i-nal, a, 1. Of or belonging to the jectlon of earth lined with a wall, at the shoulder of a ward the east, in remembrance of the bending of our beginning, origin, or first stage of existence of a thing; bastion, to cover the guns and defenders on the flank Lord's head when he died: hence the altar end of a connected with or characteristic of the first or primitive from the observation of the enemy, 2. A curved pro- churcii is technically known as the eastern end, how- state or condition; as. llie original language of the Bible. jection of a bastion-face, protecting the end of the flank. ever placed. 3. Crystal. To place, as a crystal, in po- 2. Immediately prwluced by one's own mind and T < F. oreillon, < oreille, ear, < L. auricula; see auricle.} sition to show symmetry. thought; not copied nor produced by imitation, trans- o-ririlon;. II. i. 1. To face or point eastward; in church archi- lation, or compilation; as, the original manuscript; an o^'rl-na'sal, O'ri-ne'zal, a. Of or pertaining to the tecture, to stand with the apse or the altar end toward original poem. 3. Able to produce works requiring mouth and the nose. [< L. 0» (or-), mouth, -f namts, the east. 2. To worship facing the east, or facing the thought, without copying or slavishly imitating those of nose.J o"ro-na'salt. great altar in a church. others; having the power to form novel combinations of o'ri-olt, n. Oriel, o'ry-alt, tnith, or to devise skilful O'ri-Ol, orioloid bird of the Old [>^rl-en-ta'lIon, O'ri-en-te'shnn, n. 1 . The construc- ideas, to obtain new views of o'rl-ole, n. 1. An tion of a church upon an east-and-west line, so as to inventions; as, an able and orig^flo^ writer. World, related to the have the high altar in the eastern end; also, a facing Many have oHginal minds who do not think it: they are led crOWS. The common ' Keats Letters, Feb. I9, 'IS p. 68. [G. P. P. '*«.] toward or placing the feet of a corpse toward the high away by custom. European oriole ( Orirtlns altar. In the strict orientation of a churcli the central 4. Having the character of a production conceived or galbyld) is bright-yellow line of Its apse points exactly to the rising of the sun on the composed for the first time; striking; novel; new; fresh; contrasted, especially on day of the saint for whom the church is named. as, an original thought. [F., < LL. originalis, < L. wings and tail, with 2. The situation of a building, or any object, as related origo; see origin.] o-rlg'l-noiist. to the points of the compass. Synonyms: see authentic; first; idkai,; native; It i* intereatin^ to remember that there is a ^rreat variety in PRIMEVAL; RADinAL. the aovcalled orientation of Roman temples, that is, their position Phrases: —original bill. In equity pleading, a bfll re- with reference to the east. Juua B. DE Foekst Short Hist. Art, latluK to a matter not before hrouxht to the court by the Roman Art p. 88. [D. M. A Co.] same parties standiiifj in the same Interests.— o. convey- convevanee whereby an (-state In land Is created 3. In surveying, the finding of the east point or direc- ance, the or first arises.— «. entry, the primary record made of a tion, at) as to determine a bearing; hence, process any by debit or credit In a ho<»k of account. The hook of orljjinal which direction is ascertained. entries Is the one required to be produced as proof of an The Balti- Where the word ' orientation ' is osed, it is understood to mean account.— o.j II riNiltct ion. authority to take cognizance more Oriole and the ascertaining the tfeneral direction of a chain of triangles. of a cause at Its Inception and hold It to final hearlnjc, Its Nest. G. B. AlKY Popular Astronomy lect. iv, p. 122. [macm. '66.] as UIstinKulshed from appellate jurisdiction.— o* line, o. 4. The act of correcting and makingexact one's concep- planes wee perspective. black, and builds a hanging That which serves as a model in the tion of an object, w-ixTially of determining one's own o-rle'l-Hal, ». 1. nest. 0. kundoo is the Indian production of something else, especially if it be not itself true position and relations in some matter. 5. The con- wxr-^r^- orioIc. 2. One of various copied from anything; the prototype or first form. -ro. dition of that which has been in any sense oriented or / American icteroid birds, espe- of to S^^Swrr^ Art popk'8 only the minute productions nature. despairiuK cially of genus Icterus, mostly orientated; as, the perfect or-ientatitm of the pyramids. ' " - i-:-i- -~. :_u:__ :_ ,-y\j '^^ the nUeU " Mhich are so astonishuiK in 6. Crystal. The setting up of a crystal so as to show the **=-* fi " black with yellow or orange, and the masterb' worksirka of her original.- - relation of the planes symmetrical "to the other elements. Hume Essays, The Platonist p. 92. fw. l. a co.] building a hanging nest. [< OF. oriot, < L. aureolas; 7. Zofd. The homing instinct, as in pigeons. [F., < repreBcnted In a portrait, pho- see Specifically: (I) The person AUREOLA. I (Icterus crienter; see orient, /'.] tograph, or other likeness. (2> A picture, statue, engraving, — Baltimore oriole, an American oriole oUle; 0ofa, Arm, ^sk; at, fare, ^^ccord; elfrnfiot, $r « ov«r, Sight, % — usage; tin, machine, J = r^new; obey, nd; net, ndr, at^m; full, rQle; but, bdm; Oriolidse 1343 orotund

galbula): so named becanse the colors of the male, orange [Archaic] Any furnishing or adjunct by which a thing mancie, < Gr. oT^ithotnanteia^ < omis (omith-), bird; and black, are those of Lord Baltimore. Are'^thanti'hirdi* may be prepared for use or rendered more serviceable, and see -mancy.J — or^nltli-o-niaii'tlo, a. Aii O^rl-ol'I-dH*, OTi-eli-di or -de, n. j)i. Ortdth. Old whether it contributes to decoration or not; furniture; oWni-thon, Sr'nf-then, C. E. I. H'.2 Mr. (6r-nal'thea, H^i), World fatniiy of colioinorphic birds with the upper man- vesture; equipment; harness; trappings; accessaries; n. [h.\ An aviary. 9r'nlth-o-scC'pl, C. (fir'nl-tbes'co-pl, dible noichetl and noetnls quite naked; true orioles. as, in old English use, the ornaments of a church. 6. or'nich-o-Hco''py, IF. ), n. 1 , Fnlk'lm-e. Divination by observing the aetlons O-rro-liiM, n. It. g.) [< OF. ot-ioi; see oriole.] excellence; [Rare.] Outward display; show; pretense of of birds or bv inspecting their anatomy; ornithomancy; au- — ft.— o-ii'o-Iold, a. o^rl-ol'Idt as, be not deceived with ornament. [< F. ornetnetU, < gury, observation of birds and their habits. Gr. constellation noted "i, [< O-rl'on. o-rai'§n, n. 1. Antron. A h.omamentum, < onto, adorn.] ornithn.tknpia, < nrnis {omith-), bird; and see -scopy.] for its proup of three bright stars in a straight line or'^iia-men'tal, or'na-men'tal, a. Of the nature of or- or-niH'co-pyt,— or'nith-o-sco"^l8t, n. visible (the Sword-belt or (iirdle) and for its nebula to nament; serving to adom; as, ornamental stones. See or"iillli-ol'o-iny, er'nith-et'o-nu, n. The dissecting thenakwieve. See consteli^tion, 20. 2. Or, Myth. table under stone.— or"iia-men'fal-ly, oiff. of birds; also, the anatomy or analysis of the structure hunter of' giuantic size and strength and great beauty, A or^ua-nien'tal-ist, Sr'na-men'tal-ist, n. 1 . One of birds. [< ornituo- + -tomy.] of Hvrieus. [L., Gr. OridnJ] son < who devotes himself to decorative art and working out When the study of structure [of the animal creation! is limited 0-rl'o-ii!d.o-rai'onid, n. Aittron. One of a group of its designs. 2. One skilled in the principles and meth- to a particular class or 8[>ecic8 of animals, or to a particular orpan metwin* whose radiant ixiint is in the constellation Orion. ods of ornamenlai work. or part, monwraphic scienct-s are created, as Ornithotomy. or anatomy of birds. Jamks Ohton Comp. 2oo/. intro., p. 12. [n. 76.] 0-rlf«'ka>n)- itand'slone'^. See sandstone. or^na-nieii-ta'tlon, Sr'na-men-t6'shun, n. 1. The or^Is-nioro-ay, or'is-mel'o-ji, n. Logic. The science act of adorning, or the state of being adorned. ~or"nltli-o- toDi'lc-al, a. — or"nllh-o- definitions deflning, especially of defining wi- toin'lo-al-ly, of and of Without his plot of ground for tillage and ornamentation, a a'nian swnis out of place. who practises or is skilled in ornithotomy. (< horm. Imiit). -f -loot.] — or-ls^mo-log^Ic, a.— A. Bkosson Alcutt Concord Daya. May p. 60. [R. BRos. TS.] Or"nUli-u'r«e, Sr'nith-yQ'rl or -n're, n. /V. Omith. or-lfi'^nio-loi;'i<'*al-ly, adt. 2. Those things collectively by which anything is orna- A subclass of birds, the Eurhipidui-a. [< ornith- -f- or'l-Mon, or i-zun or -^n, n. A prayer, especially one mented or adonied. 3 . A form of accessory or dependent Gr. owra, tail.]— or^nKh-u'rous, a. of habitual and earnest devotion. art whose function it is to ornament useful" objects. o^ro-a'nal, 0*rO-e'nal or -g'nal, a. Of or pertaining An activv life lonr oriaona forbids; Ornamentation includes (1) surface tiecoration, embra- to the mouth and anus. Specifically: (1) Extending from pttiuting, Yk still fthe prar d, for stiU abe pray'd \tj d«eda. cing ((I) (6> weaving^ (c) marqttelrt/, (rf) mosaic, mouth to anus; as, the oroana/ axis. X2) Functioinng as DKYDEif EieoHora t lli. (e) niello or fugraring, and if) enamel, or Incrusted met- both mouth and anus, as an orifice In crinoids. [< L. al-work; and K'i) plastic embellishment, embracing («) [< F. oraimn, < L. orfl/to(n-); see oration.] OS (W-), mouth, ANAL.] carving, (6) chlmHng, (c) forging, (d) modeling, (e) inta- -f Synonyms: ieePBAViR. Or^o-ban-cha'ce-ie, er'o-bai>-k6'eg-f or -cg'ce-§, n. glio, ^nA (f) repoussi. Compare art; ornament, w., 1. orM-Moni*. n. The horizon, •r'i-zentt. or^na-inen'tji-tlv(e, ©r'na-meu'ta-tiv, a. Tending pi. Bo(. An order of low leafless, parasitic, yellowish or''i-za'bHirool'', er'1-sQ'ba-rQt*, h. Mexican male Jalap. or striving to adorn; ornamental. or brownish, gamopetaloiis herbs — the broom-rape fam- ork'. "- s«inf a>- 'Hic. ily—with jHTiect, irregular, more or less two-lipped flow- ork^** " \ drlnklnjf-vessel; pitcher, ork'yn'^. or'na-meut'^er, Sr'na-ment'er, n. One who orna- ers with four didynamous stamens. It embraces 12 gen- Ork'ney-an. drk'n^-un, a. Of or belonging to the Ork- ments; adecorau>r: embellisher, or'na-nient^istt. era and about siwcies. n. (t. ney Inlands, northeast of HcoUand. or-nale't, r(. To ornament. 150 Or'^o-banVlie, g.) or-nale'. 6r-net' (xiiH. a. 1 . Ornamented to a marked [L., < Gr. orobanc/iP, chokeweed, < orobos, pulse, orlp. drl, tt. 1. Her. (1) A bearine, clawed as a subor- + ancA5, choke.] dinary. conci.tting of a band, half the width of a bor- degree; artistically finished, as a literary style; florid; Or^o-ban'ohe-wJ. dure.'exlending mund the shield near the edge bo as to elegant; as, orna/« rhetoric. 2. Ornamented; decorated; — or"o-ban-cha'oeou», a. as, or'^o-sen'o-sts, f or'o-jen'e-sis, er-ej'g-nl, n. Geol. The form another tthield voided; fomierly blazoned an es- ornate carving. [ < L. orrio (pp. ornatuf)^ adorn.] — or-nate'l adr. n. The or-og'e-ny, | process of mountain- formation. etitrhtOH coidtd. i2) A series of separate charges ar- V, — or-nate'ness,

quality or . . rant^ so as to form such a bordure: usu- condition of being ornate. Does not this impartial testimony form a most suffvestive . or'na-ture. firnu-<-hur r/r -llQr, n. 1, [Archaic] Theact indicatioQ of the secret cause of orogeneais f \V. B. TAYLOR in ally blazoned in or on orU. (3) A wreath, or process of omamentailon. Proc. A. A. A. S. vol. xxxiv, p. a02. [pub. BY SEC. '86.] chaplet, or roll of cloth, of two colors, In the foodty omature of welUappkrell*^ speech, . . . thon Gr. oros, mountain, genesis, -geny.] sometimes jeweled, encircling a helmet, [< + art nothing inferior to those accotnplished Dons or Hpaio. — or^o-ffeu'lo, a. and supporting a heraldic crest. 2. The Lamb £Bsa^ Klia, AU Fools' Day p. (7. [w. l. * Co.] of or'^o-grapn'tc, er'o-graf'ic, a. Of or pertaining to rim of a shield, especially a metal rim on 2t, Ornament; decoration. [OF., < LL. omatura, < L. orography; disjilaying the outlines or contour of moun- a shield of wood or osier, 3. Arch. i>rno, adoni-l tains; descriptive of mountains, or^o-grapli'lc- Same as orlet, 2. [OF.. < Ll^. orta, Or^iio-od'l-dap, 6r*ng-od'i-di or -de, «. pi. Entom. A alj.— or^o-graph'lc-al-ly, adv. dim. of L. />ra, border.]— In orle, on family of pyralidan moths having wings each deeply or-og'ra-phy, er-og'ra-fi, n. The branch of physi- •rie. arrantred. aa a series of •eparai« In Orle. cleft, 'forming six feather-like lobes. Or^ne-o'des, n. ogriiphy ifiat treats of the development and relations eharKe8<*-Ifcht.unle«otbennae8Declflcd). Amu of GM- (t- g-) [< ^f- omeddl*., < omeon, bird, 4- eido», form.] to funn Inner the shield. of highlands and moimtain ranges and so of the general •oaa an border to itAne* (GUd- — or^ne-od'ld, a. A ».— or^ne-o'dold, a. face or contour of country; general to|K)graphy. Or^ie-an-ism, Sr'l^-an-izm, n. The stone), auvase's or^ne-o-Mcop^irH^. n. Ornlthoscopy. or^nl-scop^- a [< principles and policy of the Orleans fani- tM«d within mart- Icift.— or^ne-o-HCO'^plattt n. An omlthoscoplst. or'- Gr. orrw, mountain, -f -graphyH or"e-OK'ra-phyt. irt*"*^!*- ily and Its adherento.— Or'le-an-lst. ni-aco'^pliit^. We know more of the ^neral and merely formal connection of a.—Or'le-an-lHtin. A Hupport^'rof the Orleans branch or^ne-ry* Ar'n{f-ri, a. [Dial., U. 8.1 Mean; low: a corrup- tli« monntain groups in the Hoon. than of the ot^ography of a * tion of ordinarg. used In depreciatory sense, whole terrestrial hemisphere containinK^the interiors of Africa of the French royal faniilv (lew-ended from Louis XIV. '» or'na-ry ;• and Asia. Humboldt Cosmos tr. by E. C.Otte, vol.iv, 151. [h. '70.] youngiT brother I'hilippe, Due d'Orleaiu>. That ar* Black Bess Is the omarest uiiraale I ever see. p. G. F. Khcbt in Overland Monthly Jsn., TO. p. 83. Or^o-hlp^pl-dflp, or'o-hip'i-dt or -de. 7i.;>/. An or'le-anii. Ar^l^-anz. li'.> (ftr'ltnz, !('.<;, n. 1 . A dress- Mam. oKnin, Ar'nia, tt. Same as AVirAUNA. (< Gr. »r«f«, bIrd.J early Tertiary family of horse-like perissouactyls having goods made of wool and cotton. 2. ] A kind of oriilth-, f ftr'nith-o- (Gr.), C; ftr-nith'o- (L.), U". De- plum. [< Oriran/i, city in Prance.] 44 teeth, incisors without pits, and canines large. ornltbo*. ("rived from Hrevk omi* (omifh-), bird: com- or^el, ftr'let, n. 1. A circular prominence; a bom or — or^o-lilp'pld, H.- or"«>-hlp'pold, a. blnluKforms.— or-nitb'ic, a. Of orpe^^alnin^ctoblrds.— or'o-hip'us. n. knob. 2. Arch. fillet immediately l)eneath tiieovolo Or^o-hlp'pun, 1. A genus typical of A •r^llilll-ich'nlte (XIII I. N. The foMll fuoiprint of a bird of a capital. (OF., dim. of o/V<; m-eoRLB.] orsuputaedblrd.—or'>'nilh-tch-uol'«-tfy,". Thesclence OrohipjRdae. 3. or'lm fir'IA. n. iSp.j a comet*llke muKlral hmirument. of omithh-hnltes— Or^ni(h-iMVhi-a,».jo^. I/erp. The jo-l t-ri,/V.] A or'loKet, n. Horolof^. or'teveti ar*tmiisv*t r/'frfh"'/nnVf.— or'^nilh-iHViii-Hn. '/. & /'.— or^nllh- horse- like mam- or'lop, «r'I«p. n, Xauf. The deck Ik,Tow the berth- i>-bi-oi('ra-pby, ". Tli-' lifr-hutory of birds; dewcrip- mal of this genus. deck of a line-of-batile ithip. on which the cables were tlve ornithology.— or^uith-o-bi''o-K>*npli'ic-ni, a.— The orohippus was coiled. •r^nllh-»-ceph'al-onN« a. Having ilu- Hhape of a about the size of formerly [ < \). orerlotm. < ocer^ over, + loopen^ bird's head, as part of some aliclle.— or^'nitfa-o-cup'ro- a fox, with 4 func- mn.I or'lop*deek'';.~or'lop*beaiii'*', n. l)eam A n. Fosall btrd-dung.— or^nilh-o-cop'roN. n. tional digits (tupporiluK the lower deck or orlop-deck. llte« In EIrd-dung; guano.— Or^nith-o-del^pbi-n, n. i^l. Mam. front and S behind. or'nialH. Ar'nmlz, n. sand-efl totftemus). A {AmmodyUn A sabclaas of oviparou»« nnitiiiinils with a T'llke interclavl- [< Gr.orw, moun- Or'mazd, ». Same aa Ohm rzn. ronnct-tvil with l>y artlrula- rle,and craiuroldt only »to*gfe'at to 6th ditpts. restrial region: no called necause of the great preponder- W.\n. Anallo^rof Kinc, and tin: user fra^ni'nt of a bird. enafort to bomr, wen Wra ! ahiidaaMi. AXSLIA B. EdwakM •r-nllb'o-lite* n. A Mni o-rol'o-jfy, o-rel'o-ji, n. The science of mountains; a a. n. pi. Barbara'm Mistorif eh. SS. p. AM. (B. * BT.] — •r*nltb-o-lft'lc, - Or"nilh-o-pai>'pi, treatise conceniing mountains. [< Gr. oro^, mountain, Arrhifogjjlerggidir nB An order.- Omtth. The or"nUh-o- -j- -i.-ier'iH. ;* — or"niin-op'lrr- -f oid* a.— or'^niili-oii'ier-ouM, '/. Having a hill like 0-ron'tl-iiin,o-ren'shi-umOT'-ti-um, n. Hot. A mono- n^ons dualism of Zoroutiian&m : oppoaea to Ahriman that of ahird.— (•r"nilh-o-rhyn'chl-diP, n.pl. Mam. Xy\Ac genus of aquatic North-American herbs of the or >4 nvnwnoinyvjA, the eril principle. Same as Anu- arum An .\tiiitnillan family of urnlthodflnhouH mammals with a RAMAitoA. family (Araces). O. aquaticum is the well-known golden- [< Zend Ahvramazda.] Or^mazd^. durklike bill; duckl>illi«.- oWnitb-o-rbvnVhfd, n.- rt. adorn. club. ll*erhaps < (ir. Oront^s, river in Syria.] •rn>. To or''niih-o-rbyn'cbold, '/. & ».— or^niib-o-rhyn'- o"ro-pen'do-ln, O'ro-pen' do-la, n. [Sp. Am.] The com- or'na-ment. Ar'na-mcnC tt. To embellish with orna- a. Having winK** tlkt'ihosc ut a bird.- Or'^nllb- rhona, mon Cfntrnl-Anierican cacique (Casmcus montezuma). ments; adorn; liedeck; as, to omam«n/ a temple. [< F. o-rhyn'chast n. Mam. 1 , A genuR typU-al of Oriiitho- o^ro-pen'dlot. oma/nenUr. < orfiernent; see ornament, n.j rhvnrhiitm. *^. to-t [•vwi.pl.] A mammal of thlMgenuH; a o"ro-pnar'ynx, O'ro-far'Ipx, n. That nart of the Synonyms: seeADoKM; uabnish. duckhIII.-Or''nltli-o-Mau'ri.a,«.f/. Hrrp. The /Vro- f. pharynx itnnu'diatelv behind the mouth; the pharynx or'na-meiii, n. 1. A part or an addition that con- wiurfr/.— or^nlth-o-ftnur, inr-niib'u-MRur, A'. /.), a.& ».— ^Ir^nlib-o-ncel'- proiMT: distinguished from natopharynx. [ < L. (W (or-), tribuUi^ to the beauty or eksance of a thing; an embel- n.—or'^nitb-o^aan'ri-nn, i*da, ».pf. Herp. The WnowiwrVa.~or"nitb-o-i»cel'l- mouth, I'HAKVNX.] o"ro-pliar"yn-jfP'al» a- lishment; ailomment; as, diamonds are costly orn47«n«n/jr. -f — dan, '/. & n. o'ro-tii lid", O'ro-tond' orer'o-tund (xm), a. Elfx^dioti. Omaniviii f»f v<*ry different form*, an that aeplctlnfr ani- or^nllli-o-loe'lo, f ftr'nith-o-lej'lc, -al, a. Of or mals or plftiiij*. or comp-loa:'l(*-al, t* |x>rtaining to ornithology. out any [mrticular meanlnx or fiyni)H)lli>m. haa been ext4-n- said of the voice or manner of utterance. [ < L. w (o/*-), — or''nUli-o-Iog:'l<'-al-ly, adv. * tvely Qsed tn archltcrturaTdecumilon, ttn Kprrial features mouth, + rotunditit; see round, rt.] sometJmea cbararterizlnfr or repn-oentlint n xy\>v rfr^'lvlng or*nlth-ol'o-{flf»l,5r'nith-oro-jiBt, n. A student of or — ©"ro-tun'dl-lyjW. Thequality of being orotund. a *>itir. , aa Stmir^tiir, Egi/i>U'in, one verw-d in ornithologv. o'ro-tund", n. Aouality of voice characterized by a pe- man, etc. See the architectural deAnlUoni) of these words, or*nlth-ol'o-K>', Sr'nith-ol'o-ji, n. 1 . The branch of culiar roundness, fulness, and resonance, combining the and the Uat and references under arcmitu-ture. zoology that treats of birds, their form, structure, hab- purity of the head-tone with the reverl>eration of the Bba wora Ifca orHanunifa of pwre jMowjpM, which ber freat* It is some- its, classification, and all relating to them. chest: the apprtmriate iiukIc of utterance in all deep, rreaUfraadiaoibcr bad browbl over from Rnaroani. times divldetl Into (1) ficXA ornitholoffy* the study of iRViNu 'S1.1 powerful, and sublime thoughts and emotions, and in sketehMBook, Sletpw IMUne p. iM. [o. P. P. living birds fri>m obwrvation of them In their haunts, and impressive oratorical speech. 3. Omamt-nlaiion in the abatract or as a quality, or or- (2) clON«*t o.. the Btiidy of dead birds by dissection, etc. the natural reso- naments ('(.lleetivelv; as, she wore only diamonds for or- 2. A iKKik or treatise on this subject. [ < (Jr. omitholo- Orotund, ... as a (Quality of voice. ... Is nance of nott-n of the middle and lower tenor and upper bass ' reg- nnm*'nt. 3. Anv thing or person considered as a source goa, < orrii^ ((rmith), bird. ~f-legd, speak.] ister.' when uttered in a nmnd. full, and bold style, with the glottis of dr'nith-o-man*si, C. (Ar-nith'o- honor or cn'

« a o«i; •!!; lA s fAid, {^ = futtire; e^k; churelk; dli =s ^Ae; go, sins, ipk; ao; thin; Mb = a«ure; F. boA, dttne.

orp 1344 orthogonal

•n, 9r^ ri. [Scot.] To weep con\'Ul8lvely. holstery. 2t. Gold and silver lace. {<0¥.orfrai8; see thor'rha-phatt—or-ihorh'a-phous, /i.— Or'^tho* •rplisn, dr'fan, v(. To bereave of parents; make an OKPHREY.] Hi'l-dic, n. pi. Entom. A family of noctuid moths hav- ing wings entire and pointed, fore covering hind or'rls^, n. Any one of the several species of Iris yield- ones la repose, and median veins of tiind wings tritld. Or-tho'- It is, or it is not, accordiafr to the nature of m«i, an advantage ing orris-root. "[Cor. of Iris, 3.] or'rlfoi. Ml-a, 71. (t. g.)— or"f lio-»i'id, «. &".— or-tlio'^i-oid, to be orphaHfd at an early afe. — or'risipea", «. J/erf. small l:jall of orris-root used A ((.— or"llio-»per'iiioU(!it a. Jiot. Having straight seeds. Db t)viscSY The Ccesars ch. 1, p. 40. [t. a F. *54.] to excite and maintain discliarge from an Issue.— o.sroot, Compare c(klo8permou8.— or'tho-M(yle, n. Arch. «. The fragrant violet-scented root of several species of A or'phan, a. 1. Having lost one or (more commonly) straight row of columns.— or""tlio-tri'ieiie, n. spong. /rM, especially of the Irin Ftorentlna. See IIlus. underiBis. both parents; fatherless or motherless, or without either A straight spicule having three prongH at one end at right or'se-dewt. u. Same as Di;tch mktal. or'He*duet. father or mother: said of a child or a young i>er8on still angles to the shaft. See spicule.- or'(lio-ty"poum «. or"j*ellle', Sr'sf-r, n. Same as litmus. [F., archil.] in need of parental care. 2. Of or pertaining to one Mineral. Possessing a perpendicular cleavage.— or^tlio- or-seinin, Sr-se'lin, n. Chem. A red oxy-azo coal- xy'lene, «. An Isouu-ric variety of xylene in which the or to those so orphaned; as, orphan tears; an orphan tar dyestuff of considerable body. It is a beta naphthol- two methyl groups are In the ortho-posftlon.— or-tlioz'- asylum. azo-nap!xthaiene-8odium-6uIfonate. Called also/OA7 red, y-KOUM, a. Having the blcoronal and blzygomatlc dlam- To Mr*. [Alexander] Hamilton U directly owio^ the tirst orphan raiiracienne, rxKcellin^ rutddin^ etc. [< orseille.] etere equal: said of a skull. «87him of >ew York. or"llio-<*liro-nial'l<*. or'wel-late, Sr'sel-et, ?;. Cfiern. A salt of orsellic acid. 5r"tho-cro-mat'ic, a. Phot. Jkssie Benton FRfeMONT Souvtttira ch. 7, p. 118. [d. l. CO.] Maintaining natural rclatihoto^rapliic equivalents of gous to that of an orphan: bereaved; forsaken; unpro- various lichens, as of the genus Hoccella, from whlcn It is color. The ordinary photographic processes represent tected; as, an orphan condition. [< OF. orphane, < LL. extracted by ether. Called also lecanoric acid. yellow, for Instance, as tending toward black, and blue as orjyhariun^ < Gr. orphano»\ bereft.] or^sel-lln'tc, Sr'sel-Iin'ic, a. Chem. Of, pertaining tending toward white, though the effect on the eye may be the reverse. Orthochromatlc plates correct this defect, or'phan, ti. A child deprived of its parents by death: to, or contjiining a decomposition product of orsellic fenerally by dyeing the sensitized film. sometimes applied to a minor child who has lost either acid. — orselliiilc add, a colorless crystalline compound < ORTHO- 4- Gr. chr&ma; see chroma.] one of its parents, or'pliaiitt. (C8H8O4) obtained variously, as by boiling orsellic acid with water, alcohol, or'^tho-eliro'ina-tlze, Sr'tho-crO'ma-taiz, vf. — Orphans' Conrt [IT. S.l, In some of the States, a or alkalis. court having jurisdiction over the estates of deceased per- on, ftrt, vt. [Scot, or Obs.] To turn away from In disgust. [-tized; -ti'zing.] To bring into the conditions for sons and the puardtanship of orpliaus; a probate court. ort, H. A leaving of little value; scrap or refuse; as, oris correct rendering of color-values; render orthochromatlc. — or'pliau-ett, n. A little or young orphan. and ends. [< AS. w-, out, -{-etan, eat.] — or''tlio-cliro''ina-tl-za'tlon, n. The act of or'pliuii-liood. n. The condition of being bereft The fractions of her faith, orts of her love, orthochromatizing, or state of being orthochromatized. of parents; orphanage, or'plian-cyt; or'phan- Shakespeare Troilus and Crensida act v, sc.l. or'tUo-clase,5r'tho-cle8, IK (-clez, V. S. Wr.\ n. Min- l«in*.— or'phau-ry, 7i. [Rare.] An orphan asylum. or'ta-lant, n. An ortolan, or'ta-lont. eral. A massive, cleavable to granular, brittle, vitreous, or^pliaii-age, dr'fan-fj, n. 1. Theetateor condition Or>talH-a£e, er-tal'i-dtfw-de, n.pl. Entom. A family colorless or white, gray, flesh-red, or green potassium- of being an orphan, or orphans collectively. 2. An insti- of brachycerous flies having the neuration of the wings aluminum silicate (KAlSigOy), crystallizing in the mono- clinic tution for the care of detntitute orphans; orphan asylum. complete and the front witn bristles on the ujjper part system. (Jailed also })otash feldeqmr . See feld- — spar. Gr. Ww^'i?, fracture, klab., orpbanaare part, the portion of nn intestate's estate only. Or'ta-lis, n. (t. g.) [< Gr. orialis^ fowl, prob. [< oRTHO--f < break.] reserved, by the custom of Loudon, to his children. < oniymi^ stir up.] — or-tal'Id, a. & n. — or"ta- — or''llio-clas'tlc, a. Having right-angled cleav- or'^phau-oi'ro-phyt, n. 1, The 8upp()rt of orphans. 2, lld'i-aii, H.— or'ta-lold, a. ages, as orthoclase. A hospital for orpnans or^'phnn-ot^ro-pliiNiiit, h. — ornilio-dox, Sr'tho-dex, a. 1. Correct in doctrine; The support and care of orphans: ihe title or an essay by Or"llia-go-rl(!*'cl-daj, Sr'tlm-go-ris'i-dt or -d^, n. jd. holding the commonly accepted Cotton Mather, published In 1611. Ich. The Molidm. Or^tlia-^'o-rla'cus, n. (t. g.) faith; esptxiallv, sound or-phn'ri-oii+. n. A larjre kind of hite, of the 16lh and [< Gr. orthaymiskos^ sucking pig.] in religious doctrine: specifically, holding the doctrines nth centuries, with six to nine pairs of metal strings, played — or"Uia-go-ris'eold, a. & n. of the ecumenical creeds; Trinitarian: opposed to Ae/- with a plectrum, or^phe-o're-ont. Or"tlia-llc'i-3ai, Srnba-lis'i-df or -lic'i-de, n. pi. erodox. Various religious bodies have used the wortl Or-plie'aii. 6r-fi'an, £;. Tl'.i orthodox differently, (6r'fj-an, C. ir.«) (xiii), a. Vouch. A family of land-pulmoiiates having a compound the Greek Church refusing the eplttiet Belonging or relating to to Christians not of Its communion, the Koniau Catholic the Greek demigod Orpheus, jaw with a triangular median piece and convergent lat- famous for eflfects Church denying It to Protestants, and Protestants gener- the of his lyre; hence, melodious; en- eral folds buliuiiform and a sliell. Or-tlial^l-eus, n. ally claiming It only for twllevers in Trlnltarlanlsm. Thus chanting; entrancing; us, an 6*/7)A«rt« warbler. (t. g.)~or"tlia-llc'ld, 7/. — or-tlian-cold, a. among New England Congregationallsts the Trinitarian oWphe-linet, a. Jk «. Orphaned; an orphan, or'pha- or'tlild, Sr'thid, n. etroi)homenoid brachiopod of parisiies are called simply orthodox distinguished line+i or'phe-lynt. A Or- as from ^Ai* or a related genus, having the hinge-line abbreviated. Unitarian, and tlie Quakers for like reason are sometimes Or'phto, ©r'tic, a. 1. Belonging, relating, or similar or'tliis, er'this, n. ortnid (genus Gr. divided into orthodox and Hicksite. to the legendary Thracian Ivrist On)heu6 or his works. Au Oiihis). [< orthos, straight.] But the evidence for the authenticity of the , to His name was assumed by the Orphtcl or Orphic sect, a be derived from the Heretical Writers of the first three centuries, mystic brotherhood that appeared at Athens about the 6th oWrhite, 6r'tliaU,7i. Mineral. Same as allanite. [-c<>i>b-al'ic, a. Having a head In which the ratio be- Gold embroidery, or doxy of a teacher. 2. Agreement with accepted stand- iwtcn the vctlirjil und the transverse diameters Is any costly embroid- from 70 to 7r».— or''tho-e<*pli'a-ly, /<.— Or-thoc'e-ra, n.pl. ards of faith; specifically, acceptance of a Trinitarian ery; orphrey. EiUuiii. A section of tanystonious dipters liavlng larvae church creed; as, the orthodoxy of a sermon. oWpi-nien't, Sr'pi- with a maxillary sheath and amphlpneustlc tracheal system, The franchise was allowed only to church members, and church ment, ii. Miiieral. A ashomet-flles, etc. Or-thoc'e-ra;]:*— or-tlioc'e-ran. members were admitted only on satisfactory proof of the orthodoxy sectile, flexible, I. a. Of, pertaining to, or connected with the Orthocera of their views and lives. or Orthoceratidsc. pearly, lemon-yellow, IT, n. One of the Orthocera.— Oy~ E. E. Hale United States ch. 4. p. 56. [chaot. '87.] (lioc'e-ras, «. Conch. 1, A genus typical of Orthocer- subtransparent arsen- LL. (ir. right, atidie. 2. [o-] A cephalopod of this genus.— Or"tlio- [< orthodoxia, < orthodoxia, < orlhos, -f- ic trisnlfid (ASjS,), ct^r-at'i-dne, n. pi. Conch. A Paleozoic family of nau- doked^ think.] or"tlio-dox-al'l-tyt. cr>'8tallizing in the tiloidean cephalonods, especially those with a straight or or'tIio-dro''niy,Sr'tho-drO'mi (xiii), «. Theactorart orthorhombicsygtcm. little-curved shell, siphuncle suocentral or eccentric, and of sailing on a great circle. [< ortho- -f Gr. dra?nein, ItisOToundinlopow- fcVA V^ V-^y'AV^^ aperture simple. — or'^lh«-cer-at'id.?i.—or"ilio-cer'- run.]—or"tlio-droin'ic,a.— or"tho-drom'lfs, ' • ' (I. ^^' ^^ a-toid, u. fossil ^^ ' & '(.— or"(li«-cer'a-iit*', ortho- der for use as a pig- f ^^^^ A n. The art of sailing in a straight course or on a great ceratold cenhalopod.~or"'tlio-cer"a-tit'lc, a. Having ment and as a dye- circle; great-circle sailing. a straight shell; of or pertaining toan ortboceratlte.—Or"- stuff: also made artifl- »^5'"° ^^','L .V.*K "^"'J^.i^L'^'l^ P*^?^' or^tUo-ef)''! St. Sr'tho-cp'igt. ?}. One versed in orthoepy; (South Kensington'""^ """ Museum.) tho-i'(p'la, w. »/. Ileiminth. The 7i7/aftrfoca^/o restricted. cially. [F., < L. au — or"tho-c€E'lic, a. Disposed In parallel folds, as the an authority in matters of pronunciation. rijfiffi/ientum, < aui'um, gold; and see pigment.] Intestines of steganopodous birds; having Intestines the so They whose eyes have run over Sheridan, Walker, and other or- disposed. kind's yellow^. thoejnsts, must often have smiled at their arbitrary disfigurements or'pin, Sr'pin, n. 1, Paint A pigment of various The arrangement of the intestinal folds is ' orthocoelic,' the in- of the English lang'uage. I. XyiaUKVAA Amenities of Lit., Orthog- shades from yellow to red. 2. Hot. An Old World spe- testine being disposed in light folds Iving close to and parallel with raphy in vol. ii, p. 32. [w. j. w, '66.] each other. In their ort/iocoslic character the Tubiiiares agree cies of stonecrop (Sedum Telephlum) with tuberous root, with the Steganopodes and Erodii, differing from the 'cycloccclic ' — or'^tlio-ep-ls'tlca. Pertaining to or character- stout erect stem, flattlsh, ovate, obtuse, serrate, scat- Pelargi. Itaptatorea and Laridse. W. A. FoHBES in Reji. of Chal- istic of orthoepists. [C] tered leaves, and white and purple flowers in dense ter- lenger Expedition vol. iv, p. 10. [L. Q. & CO. '82.] or'tlio-ep"y, er'tho-ep"i (xiii), n. 1. The science or minal tufts; often cultivated and widely naturalized in — or"lho-dl-a»f'o-iial. I, a. Crystal. Of or per- art of correct pronunciation. pho-nol'o-$ry{. the United States. Called also Hve'forever. [OF., < taining to the orthodlagoual. II, 71. Tlie diagonal axis Orthoepy deals with the proi«r pronunciation of words; Or- L. aurijnqmentum; see obpiment.1 or'pln.el. In a nionocllnlc crystal at right angles with the vertical thography with the proper representation of the words of the spo- or'pit, Sr'jilt. n. [Scot.] Proud; fretful. axis. (Called also orthodiagonal axift, ortltoaxis.— or'- ken lanjfiiage. R. M0RRI8 JJist. Outlines Eng. Accidence ch. 7, orr, Sr, n. [Prov. Eng.] A wooden ball used In hockey. tiio-doine* n, CruHtal. A dome parallel to the orthodl- p. 62. [MACM. '92.] or'ra, er'o, a. [Scot.] 1. Odd, In the sense of extra and agoual.- or^'tlio-ilo-maflc, a. or"tlio-doii'ti-n, — 2. Pronunciation in general; manner of pronunciation. occasional: Incldenul; as, an orrn job. 2. Employed fur n. Dental Surg. Meclianical treatment f()r correcting ir- odd jobs, as on a farm. 3. Composed of or belonging to regularity and faulty positions of the teeth.— Or"tlio- [< Gr. orthoejma, < ortftos, correct, -f €])os, word.] the liffrafl; h>w; despicable; as, an orra gathering. ni'c'ti-da, n. pi. Helminth. A division of worms with a — or"tlio-op'lc, a. Relating to or of the nature of er'racht n. .Same as oragu. segmented vermiform body, clUa fasciculate In front and vl- orthoepy. or"llio-ep'lc-alt.— or"tho-ep'le-al- or'reiR, er'elz, n. [Scot.] Something useless left over. l)ratlle elsewhere, a multicellular sacciform endoderm, and ly, adi). With correct orthoepy; in an orthoepical mode. or'c-ri, //. [-ries. a iMiiscitlMr i)seudome8odenn, as lihopahiridiE. or're-ry, pl.'\ A philosophical appa- Or"tlio- or-tliog'a-my, Sr-thog'a-mi, /;. Immediate or direct iiee'ti-diel. — or'^tlio-nec'tld, a. n. ratus for exhibiting the relative motions and positions & — Or"tlio- fertilization of the ovary, as by the stamens of the same iieu'i'ii, //. 1)1. Com-h. A section of prosobrauchiate gas- of the meml>ers of (ir. ttopuds with the two nenes from the eoinmlssural ganglia fiower. [ < oRTHo- -f- r/ainos, marriage.] the solar system: straight backward, as In racbiKl<)SKate8, most tajnloglossates, or-tlioff'na-tlilMii. Sr-theg'iia-thizm. n. The condi- sf» called in com- etc.— or"tlio-nfn'ral, or^'ilio-ueu'ruiiN, «.— Or"- tion of being orthognathoiis. or-ttiO£i:'iia-tlxyt* pliment to the Earl' tho-nyeli'i-dif, n. pi. Oriiilh. Au Australian family of or-tlios:'na-lliouM, er-tliog'na-thu8(xiii), a. Having of Orrery,at whose \\ oscinr birds with the left carotid artery alont; developed but little forward projection of the jaws; si>ecifically and supci-tlclal: splnctalls. Or'llin-uyx,n. (t. instance one of g.) Or"- {Vranimn.), having a facial angle ((Jerman) over 90" and Iho-iiye'i-diei,— or-lbo-nych'id, ?' — or-lli»ii'y. the first machines a gnathic index below See illus. under clioid, '•/.— or^tlio-phn'ri-n, ". Tendency to parallel- 9H°. proona- of the kind was An Orrery. Ism of the visual axes.— or'tlio-pliyre, «. Petrol. An THous. [< oKTHo- -f Gr. gnathos^ )i\w .'] or"tUog- made. 4*OM'ino- The tamine of the crank causes the orthocla8eporphvry;sveniteporphyrv.~or"'tli»-pliyr''ic, iiatli'lo^. a<-ope^;plan'''- ballH to revolve, hi imitation of the a. Petrol. ContalnlngdlBtfnctcrystatiiof orthoclase.- or"- or'tho-gon, Sr'tho-eren, n. A figure all the angles of natural motions of the planets they e-ta'rl-umt. th«-pin^a-coid. n. Crustal. The pfnacold parallel to which are right angles; a rectangular fieure. [< L. represent. the orthodlaK"ii;Li. -or'"'! lin-piii'"ii.eoid'iil, a.— or'- or'^rho-cyw'Uw, orthof/onius^ < (Jr. ortJior/Ofiios, < orthoe, right, thli-priHiii, /'. <'ri/s!iil. A inoii(iclhii<' pi-iMUi whose or- + or'o-Bis'tia, n. Pathol, An encysted tumor containing gOfiia, angle.] th<»dlngonal intrrccpi fN^rrriini' tliiiTi unliv.— i»i--tli«p^tie, serum or a serous fluid. Gr. orrhofi, serum, kystis; [< -f a. Math. Uelatlng to tangents tliat intersect at right an- or-tlio^'o-na1, or-theg'o-nal, a. 1. Having or deter- 8** CYST.j gles.— or'' iho-pyr'a -in id* n. Cryxtal. A pyramid mined oy right angles; rectangular; i>crpendicular. 2. er'o-hul'men-td'tls or^rho-fay''tnen«i'tlfi« or -I'tis, n. whoHc Intercept on the orthodlagoual Is greater than unity. Done by or using perpendicular lines. See projection. Puihol. Inflammation of a serous membrane. Gr.or- {< — Or-lhorh'a-phn, 71.pl. Kiiiorn. A section or sub- — orthoKoiiiiI HVHK'ni of lines, a combination of rfiOH, serum, -j- Ay/rt^w, membrane.] Iiy^'dro-liy^inen- order of dipterous Insects whose Jlnal forms fsr;ipf from two sets of lines snch that each line ()f one set intersects i'tifi;. the pupa-ease ))y means of a tlHsure helweeii iin seventh and all those of the other at right angles.— o. HVMteiii orwiir- or'rlii',or'iR, «. Fabrir^. 1. Gimp and gallwm: in up- eighth abdominal segments: opposed to C'/rinrhupha. Or- facest a combination of three systems of surfaces such

ofa, firm, Qsk; at, fftre, accord; elfiufint, jr = ov«r, eight, § = osage; tin, machine, | = renew; obey, nd; not, nor, atjm; full, rule; but, bdm; aisle; ;

ortlio$;onall)' 134$ oscillating

that evcrv surface of either 8yst4?^m Intereecu all those of eye can be examined. 2. Craniom. An instrnment for or''yc-tol'o-ityt, ». The science of fossils or whatever Is Into paleontology, the other twu systems at rlKht angles. drawing projections of skulls. [< ortho- -\- -scope.] d UK from the earth: now separated geol- ogy, petrology, and mineralogy. or-lboe'o-nal-ly. Sr-theg'o-nal-i, adv. At right an- or'^tho-scop'Ie, Sftho-scep'ic, a. 1. Having correct — or"yc-to-log'ie-nlt, «.— or^yc-tol'o-gistt, n. irk-;;: i>ir[Hndicularly; by orthogonal projection. presented in nor- vision. 2. Seen without distortion; o-ryc"io-zo-ol'o-Ky+, n. Paleontology. etc. Phil. Soc. or-llioji'ra-fer, -fy. Orthographer, mal appearance: as. an orthmcopic image. 3. Con- — o-ryc"to-a!o''o-loir'ic-alt, a. orthograph- or'tbo-ifraph, Sr'tho-grgf, n. Arch. An eirucu-d so ae to correct optical distortion; enabling one Or"y-gl'naB, ©r'i-jcu'nt or -gi'ne, n. pi. Mam. A sub- ic projecii<»n or drawing; especially, such a drawing to see in nonnal proportion; as. an orfhoscopic eyepiece family of antilopine bovids with long horns over or be- the external elevation, and somt-tiinee the inter- showing of a telescope. [ < ortho- -f Gr. skoj)e5, view.] hind orbits, and long tufted tail: including large African or vertical section, of a building. or- nal elevation, [< Or^tho-Mi'i-die, or^tho-style, etc. See ortho-. species. [< Obyx.J— oi^y-gIn(e,a. & n. 4- THO- -g;rapAv the Kni^iahalphmbet isfonnd wsntinp. K. H0RKI8 right angles, as straight lines or cur\'es. — orlhotomic der rice. [L.; see BuU. OutlineK Eng. AcHtUjtce ch. 7. p. flat. Imacm. TW.] orrcle, a circle cuttinK three jrlven circles at right annles. BICE'.] — o r" y- 2. The science that treat« of letters and spelling; the or-thot'o-mous, Sr-thel'o-mus, a. CryHai. Having zlv'o-rons, a. BcienceorartofsiH'llingcorrecilv: formeriy considered as the two cleavages at right angles to each other. [< Gr. Feeding upon rice. embracing phonetics and phonology. 3. Mrnt. The art orthotontoe^ < ortho*, right, -f temnd, cut.] 0-ry''zo-rye'tl- or act of representing tonee and effects by the proper or-thot'o-my, 5r-th«t'o-mi, n. Math. The property d«, o-roi'zo-ric'ti- characters. 4. Arch. The art or act of drawing in cor- of catting at right angles. [< ortho- + -tomv.] dt or -de, n. pi. The Abyssinian Oryx (Oryx bet- rect projection; an elevation or vertical section. [< F. or'tho-tone,5r'tho-tnn, a. Having an independent tone Mam. A Madagas- «<')- ^/*) 2. Head of the Gemsbok iO.gazella). Compare lUus. L.orfho(/raphi4t, GT.orthographia, or accent of its own, as a Greek enclitic particle (Ti'«, ti, can family of za- V35 ort/iof/rap/iie, < < under add ax. orthm. Klraight; and w-e -(.iitAPHT.) wov, »ot, iroT(. etc.) used as an interrogative, or when lamlxlodont mole- — rrroriiiedorthfitrrnpliy.orrerarmediipelliuff. emphatic, or without a preceding word to lean upon. like inseclivores with soft furand very long tail. O-ry"- 1. K«-viri(t] ^ix-lliiiK, III which untwunded and uunecesbary Compare English" the man" asdistinguishetlfrom "the zo-ryc'tes, «. (t. g.) [< Gr. ory'za, rice, + oryktls, letters are dl»*canli-(i. as m** In pn»(n"ainmv. ue In catalofcu^, man." [< (ir. orthofonof, with right accent, < orthos, digger, < arv*(i5, dig.] — o-ry^zo-ryc'tld, n.— o- cou/d. ugh in xUuu'ih, nne / In imve/ler. Phonetic l\n *Z, right, -\-teind, stretch.] or''lbo-toii'loj.~or'tbo- ry''zo-ry<*'told, a. & n, spellInK: nt^'HlnK hiiwd upon the principle that every letter (7. accent, as a word usually unaccente»l. o»',es, n. [o'RA, O'ra, ;V.] [L.] mouth or opening must n-pn-Krtit a dllTereat sound, and inusi always repre- tone, To A enclitic, into tlie interior of an organ; as, uteri. sent th«- KaiiH- ^ifund. or'lho-lone, n. A word usually but retaining os •r-thoi'o-icy. Ar thel'o-ll. n. [Archaic] The riifht naming or acnuiring an accent. See encutic; proclitic. o»*, n. [os'sA. ©s'a, pl.^ [L.] A bone.— os caleis, the or correct de«crlutfun of tbtnfs. l< Gr. orthnlogia^ < or- ur^tho-to-ne'sis, rt. Accentuation of an orthotone. calcaneuni. See Illus. under bokk.— os iiiastnuiii, the /A'.., rorreet; and see -oloov.] or''lho-trra>ne, etc. See ortho-. median distal bone of the carpus. See Illus. uuuer carpus. — OS the part of the ethmoid bone that appears or"lho-Hie«'rtr, n. Same as orthobhombic. Sr-thoi'ro-pizm. n. Sot. Vertical planum* «>r«lbot'ro-plHiu, at the Inner side eye.— or-lbom'e-lry, ftr-thom'e-tri, n. The art or the pnn- of the orbit of the os triifonuni* grtmth: a term applied to developing plant-organs that a small bone soinetlmes found hi the ankle: apparently a verslflcatton. obtho- -(- <;r. nut- ciples of correct [< g^w nearly vertically, either upwanl or downward.— separate oselAcntlon of part of the astragalus. rofi. measure.] a. Characterizetrop'lr, o»*, n. Qtol. Same as osak. | < Sw. (?x.] oset. a. 1. Being in a op''lho-mor'phlc,6r*tho-mftr'fic, or-thot'ro-poui*, Sr-thet'ro-pus, a. Jiot. 1. Turnwl o»-y prefix. VoTxnot ofm-.ob-. See ob-. state of (jerfecttHi development prior to the formation of ^^ growing straight: said of an ovule in which the nucel- O^Hage or'ange, O's^j er'gnj. A handsome tree (J/ia- and terminal elements: said of organizeing shapeof inflnitely sma ings. 2. .\f(i/h. the fl^e at the other end. 2. So lying in the seed as to have milky juice, alternate entire glossy leaves, axillary pe- those of uroiection in which small parts, as modes the mdicle toward the hilum: said of a straight embryo. diwicles, a large inedible aggregate fruit somewhat re- remain such, though the shape of large figures squares [< ortho- -f Gr. ^roww, a turning.] or-thot'ro-pal:. sembling an orange in size and color, and stout axillary altered. oBTHf>- 4- (»r. marphi, form.] may be ( < ar'tho-tr^paaB, etc. See obtho-. spines. It is extensively cultivated forliedges as well as ftr'tho-mSr-fO'sis, 'Si/ra. or^iho-mop-plio'»la, B. 1. or^throa, Ar'throa, n. Gr. Ch. A canonical hour corre- forornament. It derives Its nsme from the Osatjc Moun- The correction of Irregular or misshapen parts. 2. sponding to lauds of the Roman Chnrch. but with a more tains of Arkansas, where It Is native. Fniin Its former use M'lth. The process of expanding or contracting a figure elaborate office. [< fir. ortArott. dawn, < (rmytni, stir.] by the Indians for making bows, the elastic yellow wood Is witiiout diftnrtiiig the Infinitesimal component parts. or'tlT(e. fir'tiv, a. Rising or eastern; orient: as, theor- often called bmC'Wood and boiu'd'arc. tribe of [< oitTHo — M<»RpHosi8.] ^ir^ amplitude of a Star. [< hh.ortirtis, < h. orfus, pp. O-aa^ffes, o-s6'jez, «. /V. A North-American or'lho-mor^phy, Ar'tho-mSr'fi, n. The right<«haplng of orior, rise.] Siouan stock, in the Indian Territory. See American. o-san^nat. n. & interi. Hosanna. oosan'net. ethieallv, as of conduct. oKto-lan, 6rto-lan, n. . An Old World bunting (Am- O'sor, ridge of Or"lho-nec'il-da, -nychM-die, etc. See oktho-. beriza hortulana), reddish- o'aar, n. Geol. 1. Loosely, a any system of glacially deposited tortuous ridges or rounded hills or^lho-pe'dl-a. i ftr*tho-pI'di-a, E. I. (-pv-dai'a, C.\ gray above with blaclcish or'^lhu-pir'dt-a, In. Mtd. The correcting or prevent- spots and with a greenish- of sand or OTavel: thus often used interchangeably with in itslooser usage, well as with eaknr. In the ing of deformity in any part of the bcxly, e^iecially In the gray head. It is netted in kame as 2. caiw;or infiints: u brancn of plastic surgery. [< ohtho- great numbers and fattened, stricter present usage of American geologists, a long continuous serpentine ridge of glacial sand or gravel, -f (ir. iKiui y iMiid ), child.] or'tho-pe'^Lor-jpae'ndi-:. and is highly esteemed as a H'. superficially, extend- — or^llio-pe'dle (-pie'dle, 6'.*; -ped'lc, If'r. table 'delicacy. 2. Ijiome sometimes currying boulders and fii move- -pipd'lr, c'u a. Mea. Relating to ortbopedla; as, other bird considered a deli- ing down valleys the direction of the glacial an orth/j/fedic hospital. or''(ho-p«'dlc*for p«d'- cacy, as in England the ment. Called also a tierfteni kame.

. of lc-]«i:. — or''tho-De'[or-pir']dle»,«. Med. Same wheati-ar. and in the United It u . . not a inatUT inui-h itnporUuice whether we form the -- words to asoRTHopEoiA.--or''tho-pe'[or-pK^dlftl*n. Med. Stales the reed»bird or bobo- 61urBl after the Swi'ditth fomi» Ow, Osar, or regard the 9 thoroiiifhly aiinrlK'ized and t*Tm them Oitar — Osars. One who i>ractises orthopedut. link sora-rall. and the 3. O. H. Stone in Am. Journal of Science Aug., '90, p. I!i6, note. or'thu-pho'^iir, ftr'tho-fO'ni. C. (ftr-thof'o-nl, K. I. W. The Ortolan ( ^mft«ri«a Aor- [W. Ind.l A ground-dove [.). n. The art of speaking correctly; voice-culUire. tutanai. 14 (ColumUgaUina poMeHna). cm, mucli«expanded part of an osar; a glacial sand-plain. \< oKTHo- Gr. ph}jhr, voice^] It. hortulanus, gardener, hortultUy + [ F., < ortolano, < L. < On'can, ©s'can, ». 1, One of a pre-Latin people in • or'^ifao-phoTI-a* or''tho»phyr'lc. etc. See obtho-. * ' dim. of/r hortus, garden.] southern Italy. 2. An Italic language, one of those out or''lhop-n€r'a, ftrthopniu: n. AiMtrf. A morbid „^,y-^„^ ftr'S-gan, 'C. (-gan, H'.). n. A quail-like of which formed. organs of respiration renaenng breath- the vulgar Latin was [< L. Oacit condition of the i^j^^ ^^ hemipod T< Obttx ] people of Campania.] On'oan, a. ing practkatWe oiUy when a pemm is erect, either sitting — or^ty-jrl'me, ftr'ti jal'nl or'-gt'n*' «• i^- OmWi. The HS'ke-us, u. scrotum. Gr. o«cA2, scro- orthos, os'che-UH, The [< or standing; dTspooea. [h., H'chc-o-plas''Cy* n. rmauria. [ < outho- f Gr. pout {vod-\ foot.] for poison; a Plastic surgery of the scrotum.- oh-i __ n. Innam- — or'tho-pird. n. - or-tbop'0«dona. a. with thcKdraffswilll.thisTtrrjrdkv, compoand the trooorrfe- H-ciii'tis, matfon of the scrotum. os-chei'tiMt. ftr'thoprax'ls, b. Surg. Mechanical tan. hcott JCewMMwrt* vol. f. th. 13. p. as. tH.M.*co.] or^tho-praxMM. os'cil-lan-cytt "- The state 4if oscillating or swlnfclng. deformities. obtho- Or'l, a. Contalningor bearing ore. ore'yj. treatment for the cure uf bodily [< or'y, 0»''fll-la"rl-a'ce-R!, oaM-le'ri-e'sgl or -Ig'ri-a'ce-^, snffix of English nouns and adjectives, of + iiT.praxi*: see pbaxis.] 'OTy^9^ff^x. A n.pl. Hot. An order of coiifcrvoid algae consisting of Right-doing; Latin origin, signifying, in nouns, place; as. dormitwy, or'tho-prax^'y. 6r'tho-prax"l, n. 1. delicate blue-green threads occurring singly or in large principles. Ortho- oral^^ry, purgatory, refectory, etc. ; In adjectives, relating pntcedure accortling U» correct 2. floating masses in running, stagnant, or rarely in s3t praxis.] to, of the nature of; as, amatory, rotuxory. See -or. [ < praxis. [ < oktiio- -f Or. praxiti see water: from their spontaneous motion. O«"oll-la'- flr-thop'te-ra, n. pi. Entom. An order L. -orius^ -orla, -orium, adj. termination; -orium, noun Or-lhop'te-ra. rl-a, n. (t. g.) [< L. OftcillUTn; see oscillate.] 0»"- of ameUil>()l(ius numdlDulate insects with hind termination.mination.l oll-la-to^'rl-aVe-seJ.—oi«"eII-Ia"rl-a'feoufi,a. coriaceous and geoeraffy •'ry-alt.^alt. n.«. BameftameasoBiEL. o^ry-alit. membrimous itwl fore whigs os'i-let, v. [la'ted; -la'ting.] 1. To o-ric't^-rop, n. An aardvark or oryc- ofli'cil-late, 1. straight, inrl.i.ling loauST crickets, mantl& cock- O'rje'U^rope, cause to swing or move back and forth ; make to vibrate. LT-asMhopiK-rs, etc. See illus. under ORASSHOIT^R _t«ropodld.oir^yc-lere^. roaclM-s. At a- i. 1 . swing back and forth; vibrate; especially, er Ic-ter o-pedM-dt^^ ct- -de. II. To and MANT1-. Gr. orthopleroe, straight-winged, < Oi^yc-ter''o-pod'l-dw, n^ 1<' to swing under the influence of some force witiiout, as a '• ' ^^' *-"-- - «/ i/«... An African family of fodient e

It in difficult indeed to ima^ne that anything can oHcHlate so rapidly om to strike the retina of the eye 831,479.000,000.000 time« in one Hecond. a« mnKt be the ewe with violet light according to thia " Ithe andulatoryl hypothesis. edentate of this genus; an aardvark. See illus. under \V. 8. Jevons Lemaons in Logic lesson xxxi, p. 272. [macm. 7(t.] al ft oV-lhoD'^ter-ol'o-ftst.'n. aardvark. Or. oryA-;?r, digger, -(-/m«/«(/>w/-), foot.] «ror^tlio-rhom'bt«..^?'""" «rtho-rom'bic, a. Crystal. Of [< 2. To pass from one state to anotiier and back again; *"" TV r", /™" ",l^^^^ o-ric't c». n. Rarcri Same as obyctolooy. or ;.ertainnu' to "J^*hose ** fluctuate; waver; as, public oninion (tsdllatefi In'tween or/ktikoM. flt for or.,sm, dig.] «7*^. "^ [I Qr dliglnK, < 08- '«I™right *^«J,anglestoej^hothtr^^^.^j severity and lenitv. [ L. osciuatus, of o»cUlo^ < KV'ini *.ree planes at o-ric-to-jg-el'o-ji, «. The clas- < pp. I Kilt -tem assumed to <^ntaln three nniike cillum, swing, little mouth or mask moved by the wind, ^^{^^11,,^ ^,„j arrangement of fossils. i< Ur. orykto«. -. aiMt tnmetric, orthofymmei' < mculuw, dim. of os, mouth.] ax.-»« CnMetl ^^^^jj ,ipoL<>ov rhombic] ^ ] Synonyms: see fluctuate. ru- >- .i.uzATiON. t< ORTHO- -I- or''yc-tO(r'no-«y+, n. Mlneralopv. - or^yr-toic-noH'- on'cll-la^HliiK, ©s'i 16'ting. jm. 1 . That oscillates, in or'tUn-mrnp^. Sr'tho-BcOp, n. 1. An Instrument by ,|,.t ,,r .lie.al^. '/.-or"yr-log-no*«'lle-nl-lyt, utlr. any sense; as, an oxcWnting engine (see enoine); oscU- whirh a b

aSKOHt; ell; lAsftfud, IQsfaiure; cask; cliarcli; dJiss^Ae; so, sins, l^ik; •<>; tliin; sta = azure; F. boA, dttne. <,frotn; i^obaoUU; X^varUtnU^ . :

osoillatlon 1246 Ossei

that the two parts are nearly equally balanced and bo at- best-known are the Euroi)ean \elvet osier (Salix rimi- ment of osmotic pressure. 2. Measurement of acutenesa tached as to swing freely backward and forward. nalut) and the purple usfer (A", purjn/rea), tlie latter of smell.— o»"mo-iiiet'rlc» a. — oncillatinv Talve. 1. A valve oselllHtliiK axlally sparingly naturalized and the former sometimes plantetl os'iuohc, vi. To show osmose; diffuse through a septum- on a Kbaflt as In a Corliss engine. -Z* Hfj'tranl. One uf a in the United States. U, One of the shoots of an osier. Watery solutions usually usmme readily. pair of Tatves borne on an usclUatinK tiorlzunlal lever, so His grather'd feet I tied J- ^- CUTTER Comprehensive Physiol, ch. 163. that when one Is upon Its seat the utber Is raised. 8, p. [u] With twining o*i>r« which theti>e bankl«»nk supplied. es'mOs, W^.a OM'^ctl-la'tton, ©e'i-l^'shun. «. 1. The act or state of u.„^„ ^Jj"*' os'mose, v. (ez'mos, S. W.^ Wr.), n. Phvs- HOMER tr.• by I'ope.I'ope, bk. x. 1. IM. oscillating. (1) A :«vvinginj; or moving from eideto side. ^^ j ^ ^he mixing or tendenc.v to mix of two liqS 3. A similar plant of some other genus or family, or its (2t Variation or Huctuatiun: as, oncwatio/at of opinion. or two gases by passage through a membrane or porous osier-like shoots, as the American red osier. [F. ; cp. 3. P/iy^ticv. Specifically, a single ttwiiig of an otscillating wall separating them. Gr. II. «• An oscine bird. /; moe, pushing, < MheO, push.] pfer against wiiich stands " OK-nio'Hls^. OM'cl-nes, es'si-nlz or -ci-nes, h. ;V. OrnWi. A sub- a tlgurt! of Osiris of about — electric osmose, a difference of level In two liquids order of passerines. esi)eciHlly those with several pairs of equal height, on opposite sides of a diaphragm, caused by the passage of an electric current. The level is muscles attached to u^per bronchial semi-rings, torming O-sl'rl-fy, o-sai'ri-fai, vt. higher on the side toward fi" which the current flows. an apparatus for singui^: including thrushes, sparrows, [-fied; -py'ing.] To de- M- on-inot'ic, es-met'ic, a. Of, pertaining to, caused bv, etc. lPI- of L- Ofce/i^ singing bird, otf^- (old form of ify or identify with Osiris, < jjj or showing osmose. os"ino-slt'lct. ob), before, cano, sing.] [< OSIKIS -FY.] + + — osiiiotic pressure, pressure due to or considered ofi«-eln'i-an, es-sin'i-an. Oscine. o-sai'ris o-sf- O-st'rIs, or as causing osmose; especially, the maximum pressure pro- os-<*in'i-aii. n. A fly of the genus Oscinis, as O. frii^ ris, n. Egypt. Myth. The duced In a closed porous cell containing a solution into destructive to wheat and barley. most popular of Egyptian which pure water Is allowed to diffuse. Such pressure fol- Os»-ctii'l-dw, os-sin'i-dl or -de, n. pi. Entoni. A fam- gods, son of Seb and lows laws analogous to those of gaseous pressure, and Its phenomena ily of brachycerous flies having no auxiliary vein or pos- Nutpe, husband of Isis have given rise to the osnintic tbeory of so- Uitlon. See solutjo.n'. terior cell, front without bristles, and border of mouth and father of Horus: os-iiiot'i<-, //. Same as OSMOGENE. without vibrissa;. Os'cl-ikls, n. (t. [Perhaps identified with the sun, g.) < OH-inof^ic-al-ly. adv. By osmose; according to the laws L. oscen; see Oscines.] with the Nile, etc, and of osmose. — os'ol-nid, a. & n. — os^ci-notd. a. representing in his myths os'mund, es'mund, C. (ez'-, E. Wr.\ n. Bol. A fern os'cl-tan-cj-, es'i-tan-si, n. [Archaic.J 1. The act of the vicissitudes of human of the genus Osmvnda. yawning or gaping. 2. Unusual drowsiness; dulness. life. He was slain Set, by Margaret . . . found clusters of tall osinunds. straight as an o»'cl-laut, os'i-taut, a. [Archaic] 1. Yawning with avenged by Horus, and be- arrow, with white downy stems and hlack seed. leaves, curling gracefullj- at the top. drowsiness: gaping. 2. Drowsy; sluggish. [< L. os- came judge of the dead. He was the of llglit, Sylvester Judp Margaret pt. ii, ch. ciUin(t-)*; upr. of Ofieifo: seeosciTATE.]— osollantfever, god health, 1, p. 162. (b. bros. 71.] a form of fever aceouipanied verdure, agriculture, and [< F. omnonde, < LL. rt.iiiiinrr totn ant>i. oscule'<^»/,.,i,i thc sultaii of Turkcy. Scc OTTOMAN. o'(*osber"ry, O'sO-ber'i, n. A shrub or small tree (A'w^ o»"cu-Ia'rl», es'kiu-le'ris or -cu-lg'ris, «. [-ues, /)^.] The westernmost Turkish race, the conquerors of Constantino- tallza Cercudfonnia) of the rose family iIionacese\ produ- ple, usually known the distinctive Anat. The orbicularis oris muscle. h. osculum; see by name qsraaiji/s or Ottomans cing a blue^black bitter drupe ripening in June antlJuly l< (both words are corruptions ot the name of their leader, Othman), OSGL-XUM.] found '"in Cnlifnrni.i andiini] IlOlthHardnnrtl,,v,ir.l U)t., Ptp„o.ot ttn,..,^ have a veryrich and abundant literature. W. D. Whitney ioiin: """i" /-f'""""" get feound. es'kiu-Iet, ti. os'cu-late, [-la'teu; -la'tino.] I. t. 1. and Study of Lang. lect. viii, p. 3U. [s. 74.] OS-J>Iira'dI-Ulll, es-fre'dl-um or -frQ'dl-um, n. [-DI-A To kiss. 2. Georn. To touch by osculation. [< Turk. ^Osmanliy < ^Osma7i, Osman, Othman.] y/.] Conch. An olfactory organ. I. To kiss one another. Near the base of II. 1. tewn. To touch the stem of eac-h etenidiam is . . . 2. os'niate, es'met, C. (ez'mgt, W.) (xiii), n. Chim. A Spengel's niuttially olfactory organ, which tests the respiratorv fluid, by osculation, as two curves. 3. awrf. To have salt of osmic acid and is persistent (H-OsO.). OH'ml-atet; oz'mtte]:. in its position and nerve.supply characters in common as two genera or families; interos- throughout the group MoUusca. o8"ma-te'rl-um, es-md-tl'ri-um or -te'ri-nm, n. \-L We propose to call it the ositnradium. cuiate L. wcirfato, of (wratov see osculant.] I < pp. pi.] Entom.. A retractile organ for producing or emit- Lankester m Encyc. Brit. 9th ed., vol. xvi. p. 636. oa'cu-la^tins, es'kiii-le-tmg, ;m. Geoni. Touching ting an odor, as in the first anterior segment of certain [< Gr. ot!p/)?-adwn, strong scent, osjihra, smell.] --.--•..-- . » < meet closely; having common curvature. See oscula caterpillars. .. .,. . . , - See illus. under orange-dog. Gr. on- — -,.,-. , [< 08-plira'dl-al, a. ""'"^ '^°'' ""^^ ««"n>e-te'rl.umt. 08.pI.re''8l.«I'o.Ky,8-pIire*»l-oro-Ky', es- ' < es.frllor -fr6-]si-el'o-ji, „. The ™rVnsTn! v'- "«In"i'ora*tortul'ufcurv''e''''""^ 'f T""'! os'ina-zome, es'ma-zOm, n. A brown savory extract science of odors anaan^ the senset of smell, or treatise o«"eu.Ta^loii es-kiu leUon « 1 The act of kissing a on formed '"in the roasting•"a^'ing of >"™t,meat, to which the character- this science. Gr. osphreds or ovulating- a kisL 2 Gei^' The conuJtli ween ?'":""^ *? f [< (< o^p/irainoniai. smell), istic odor and taste are due. [ < '*'Gr. """"ow«? ''"'(see "'"""''"osm ate- an;Svin cuVve''a^ranoier'c,re Jf't'iie saSe'cirvatur '^ ^••;,?• Tv^fl^ltTtoaT"-BlUM) -f- z5mos, broth.] ol";^ki."Te;;>Ur?sV"'"-^-!f at the point of contact, Se* oscuLATiNa CIRCLE, nnder --™- '•'''^•"'' '™-''^'^? '''' '^ "' " >" „«T^J.t^JJ^*; ^™'JSi„,ie, «. c/iem. Of, pertaining**^--'''^Ich. A family of labyrinthobranch fishes, especially those ciBCLE. [ < L. oeculalMn-). < oseulaius; see osculate.] to, or containing osmium and nitrogen. [< osmhtm with a small mouth and no os^cu-la-to'ri-um, es'klu-Io-tO'rI-um, H. [LL.] Samcas + palatal teeth. Os-pliroin'- AMID, «.] c-niis, n. (t. PAX, 1. os'cu-la-rytt OM'cu-la-to"ryt, g.) [< Gr. Of/ihrotmnos, aorist p. of os- — osmiamic acid, a clear yellow aqueous compound o»'eu-Ia-lo''ry,e8'kitt-la-to-ri, a. 1. Of or pertaining phraiiiomai, smell.] — os- pbroin'e-nld, n.— oa- (HoNoOsaOc) obtained by decomposing the barium salt with ° to kissing. 2. Georn. Having the property of coined pliroin'e-nold, a. an aqueous solution of sulfuric •/*• add. *kJ'/B»i.«r »>.r//«i «/« ^ -^ . i *. i dent curvature; osculating. « ™ [< LL. osculatoririm, < L. -„8"m,.am'a,e, n. Cent. A salt of osmiamic oectitor; see osculant.] ^C.^^'pZll. ''Z'J^X?t^!^orZ'''.X^^Zdtt. loins. Gr. OH'co-la"trlx, es'kin-le-trix, C. E. I. (es-kiu-le'trix, os'iiii-atet, n. Osmate. os'initel. [< o«/)Aj(«. loin, + MYELITIS.] os'prey, es'prg, n. widely distributed n.nr.),ri. [-TBi'CEs, /)<.] Math. The envelojx! of the os'nilc, es'mic, C. /. (ez'mic, A', H'.), a Chem. Of, per- A pandionoid bird ofor pre"prey (Pandion"^—'- — haltaetus),!.„».•„,,„. .v .i„_i. . ,. osculating planes of a tortuous curve. [ < L. dnculatus; taining to, or containing osmium, esjx'cially in its higher dark-brown abov with the head, neck, see OSCULATE.] valence.— osniic acid. 1. A volatilecoloriess compound and lower parts mostly white. os'cule, es'kiOl, ». \. Zool. {\) Spong. One of the com- (OSO4) formed by heating osmium or one of Its lower oxids It preys upon fish, which it captures in its paratively large apeitures by which water with waste In air; osmium tetroxid; ».i. A hvpothetk-al compound of talons. [ < osminni trioxld with water (IloOsO.f, Its productii is expelled; an excurrent aperture; a vent. (8) known bv salts. OF. 'osfrale, < L. osfifragus; see OS^'llli-llro'sis, os'uil-dro'sls, i\tth()t. A Backer, as of a tapeworm. i.2 AnyAnv'sninllsmall apertureanertiire IihVhav- «. A iuorbld state oasiFRAOE.] nsli' = liawk''t; In which lipe; q, (^^ perspiration It gives off a fetid odor. [< rtslilng ing a little mouth. [ < L. o»cilvm; sec osculum.] eaglet; fishlne; q^. ome (sec osmaterium) -t- hidrosis.1 — os'cule, a. Bearing an oscule or oscules. bau'k):; os'prayt; os'^ oM'mt-aiiH es'mi-ijs {• r lei/'- F III n Chem of . . -v priiigt; os'sprliig-ert. ©•"cii-lo'sa.es-kiu-io'sQ, „.;><. Proloz. A division of ^^in^nTto or cnntaininsosmiuiii^^^ radiolarians having the centraf capsule ™"""'"' ''"P*-"''"-^ "> "» osst, «. To show; preSct; prophesy, egg-shaped, «ith K-lower vallncevaiLiiw,. os'moustuh moiis:;. ao principalDririciual auerturcaijeriurc at theUK, basaloasai poitnnle ol'^the chief nvia — osst, h. A presage uttered un- 01 the chlcl axis. — osininus oxid, a grayish-black amorphous com- awares- portent OHset ['-"' ....'.,.".;.„.t.,' Myth. A mountain in Thes- obcule. 2. An osculatorium. [L., dim. of os'inl-um, es'mi-um, n. Cliem. blue-white metallic os, mouth.] A saly, separated from Olyin- -o»e. Same as -tjus. elementeienicnt. heeSeeFiFMENTelement. pus by the Vale of Tempe, o^sel, n. Same as ouzel. Metallic osmium ... is infusible. ... Its alloy, osmindium, is ftihleff tn hnve lioen iiilp.1 hu o-sel'la. osel'lu, n. [It.] A silver medal or token used for tipping gold pens and tor conipiua bearings being inoxi- . ™ struck J"" „!.,.°"" ,^ !"r ,J tY by the doges of Venice for presentation to members of the dizable, proof against acids, and not magnetic. C. G. W. LOCK the" giant«" " on"'* top"" of Pelt- Gr<»t Council: Instituted In isai by Antonio Grlmanl, and Workshop Receipts third series, p. 401. [SP. 4 CO. *84.J on and both rolled toward said have to been a substitute for a present of birds, [< Gr. onm?, odor; see osmaterium.I Olympus, to enable them to os'nail, OBgas, re. iS. Am.) A gecko-llzard. scale the alMxle of the gods. , osmo-.' Derived from Greek osmS, odor (see osmatehi- O^sl-an'drl-an. O'si-an'dri-un, n. Ch. IIM. One of See Olympus; UM); a combining form.— os"ino-dyH-pho'rl-a, 7). in- Pelion; the followers of (Jsiander, a German Protestant mystic ability to bear certain odors.—_ os'^llio-noH-ol^o-ffy. ". Titan. (16th ceiitury) who taught that justification by faith in- The"yep"8rtmcnt"of m"edrc"aT science "hat \"ea^ es-se'ri-ora The Osprey. Vi, volved the infusion of the essential nghleonsness or di- eases of the organs of smell; a treatise such on diseases. or -sg'ri-um n [-R1-A ??/ ] A small receptacle for the vine nature of Christ. ss'mo-jin, on'mo-gene, n. A device for illustrating or bones or ashes of the (iead; an ossuary. [LL., < L. as, o'aler, 0'zhi;r, a. Consisting of or made from twigg of utilizing the principles of osmose, as in dialysis. [< Gr. bone.] 08^8u-a'ri-um'*' willow or similar plants. ftwntw (see osmose) + -gene.] 08-mot'lc:(. o»'«a-ture, ag'a-chur or -Yiljr, « Arch. A frame or A riave,ill-dre«i'd.»d mean, behind him bore OB-mom'c-tcr, es-mem'g-tsr, C. W.«(ez-, W.^\n. skeleton, as of a building or of Some definite part of a An oater.basket, fiird with fishy store. PAys. aSct. 1 . An apparatus for measuring the molecular building, as a window or roof IF < L

oisein 1347 ofitotiis

o»'»e-In. ee'g-in, n. 1. Cliem. The soft proteld sub- (*<«»(Oi/«e-ouM-ly, es's-us-li, adv. In respect of bones; as •••^"'''•vle, ssten'siv, a. 1, E.xhibiting; showing, "s^te-o-ola'sls, es'te-o-cle'sis.H'.', or os'te-ec'la-sis C regards Utiles; as, o/tgeottsiu In logic, setting forth H'.^ immature. 2- a general principle that manl- «. l.Snrq.'Vhe: operation of breaking a bone to os'oe-ler, es's-ter, n. European festly includes the proposition correct A sturgeon (Adpeneer to be proved. [ < F. o«- a deformity or of rebreaking to remedy a bad set- gOhUit^tiiurt). [< Rus. o^tru,] teimf, < L. mteiimg, pp. of osleiido; si'e ostentation.] ting. 2. Therap. Absorption of osseous tissue. [< Oi)'i>e-thl, os'§-tI, «. The branch of the Eaikh lan- — ostcnslve deiiionNtration (.>/«<*.), a plain, direct, osTEo- + Gr. klgli-.-o. An instrument for 4)»-»et'lc, es-set'ic, a. Of or pertaining to the Oeses or rrducliou of syl. effecting osteoclasis. 2. Anal. large lOKiwMift. reduction by^proecsscs of conversion, permuta- A multinucleate Osseti*. the . central division of the peoples of the Cau- tlon, and '"" ..I.I.... .-* ..- ..^^.. cell found in the marrow of bones and thought to effect transpusUlon of premises, or by any oneJ oft these. casus, who call themselves Iron or Iruti. Ott-«ie'(lan:. — o«-teii'«ilv(e-Iy, (uJv. In an ostensive i Ok-hcCIc, n. 1. One of an Iranic people living on tlle os-ten'BO-ry, B8.tenBoVl,«"saineM'MONOTRA^^^^ «lc, o. Absorbing bone; of or pertainingtoan osteoclast. slopes of the Great Caucasus. 2. Same as Ossetui. len-solr'+i OH"teii.Ho'rWumt. »« te-o-col'la, es-ts-o-col'a, «. 1. An incrustation of Thif Prnsian. with all ita dialticts. o«'l«^ntt os'tent, ;*. .\n'liaie. Calcium ancient and modern, and with 1,1 j A manifestation; portent. carbonate found on the roots and stems of plants il. ''"•!»;" ™;'l»»<>nh.wt.l and on the east -as the Armenian. Ostenta from whkh she may presume, growing in loose and sandy soils in Germany; suUDOSed

La„„. and /.„d, Lanf. "' """^^ ' "'''''"; of !«,. ,, p. IK. Is. 7*.J 3t, Appearance; aspect; manner; air. ^ < + '"; *<^«' «'"<' ' [ < L <^; „ S^f' „X^ iS'.^'i;"';^''"'- OBKi-. Derive.1 from Latin o»(aM-), bone: a combining fca-fo; seeosTEirATioi.] 2»/;S""-J«V.;"^:^?V'"' :^?"""'^^^ .''''' '*'^" "^'^r^ os'ten-tatet, r<. To make a '"'"SP"™"' 8"''- form.-<»..lf'er.«u., a. Yielding or containing bones; pretentious show of. o8. s^nces«^;?*,f?,"»,' "t~TnL^J'ln„i^'"' a8,an o«(rfro-«»lr8tum.-os-»ir'lc, '£!" ^•. that app,-ars in growing bone. Lime-salts are 1. Bone-formlng" ,. afterward productive of bone from some other tissue.- oVsl-fl^-d, ""•*"•» •'""• os'ten-te'shnn, n. 1. The act of dis- deposited within it. [< ostko- -f -oen.] va. Clianged Into »"- attributed to Mahomet vol. i, ch. 3», p. 348. [o. p. p. '63.] .[< OSTEO- -f genesis.] os"te-o-sen'e- i)lytbo«e fragments wTitten or compiled in 2+. A spectacle or displav; ceremony; show. 3t. Pub- •>"*' «>«'"/i*A e.thibit, < o6, before, -*- f«/,(/o [< -f- -okapuy.] — o8"le-ogr'ra- that fascinated BvriMi and Goethe, but now often called stretch.] OH"len-la'<-lo»t. pber, n.— o«("le-o-grapli'io, a. magiiilooiient and turgid. Synonyms: boast, boaallng. display, flourish, pageant, "•'**-»'d, os'tg-eid. 1. a. Hesembling bone; bony. — Uiialanic literalare, Gaelic heroic literature. pageantry, lutrade,jiarade, pump,pomp, pomposity,puinposlty, poinpuusness,poinpousness, show,show! H. " A morbid bone-like « calcareous growgrowth.th |« bone,Imnc +j- ?i«. seeuo.jid.J-oiD otUntaUon. There mav lie great .«»«;,/« • • OH'ai-cIe, ee'i-cl, «. 1 . A small bone: us, the otndet of or "Aoir with llltle on'tp.o.lltB ««'tB r. init „ 1 iVi.. J3.; a .: subsunce: »«e„/„i,«„ iuggf^is son^thti.g ^'"»»»'^«',im-'" the internal ear. 2. T^oot. One of vari- snlmwntla to be nure\ arietx^of^immi Q M'JlnZ?'' shown. — -., „.ofpat"*-„^„„,^. 2.*.„,,„„..„„„,,.A fossil bone. l<;ostko-[ + oiu small bard nodular stmcturea. (1) -,„„ . ^. """i clpallytoaffalnofaniisorstale:clpallytoaffalrsofaniisorstate; a8.a^l>val^>Ia^nnf'a8,ari)vnlt .. EMn. (a) One of the calcareous amlU- ,;}',, skel- i*ij parade. Pompimiii and uompni,j<:\fx^ are the aBeita- "• le-d'o-gy, es tg-el'o-ji, n. Anat. The iwrt of ana- etal plates In the integument, as in star- tlon of pm«».— Antonyms: oilfldenee, modesty, quietness tomical science that treats of the structure, articulation. fi-h'- (6).\jointofacrinoid. reserve, retinMn^'Ut. »lirliiklng, {.i)Onul. timldlly, unohtruslveness. development, etc., of the Ixuies of the skeleton and the .\ I liUiiious process of the gastric skel- oa'ten-la'lloiiH. re-un-te'shus. a. 1. Fond of os- chemical and physical properties of the osseous tissue. et'i;i L. tentation; [< owicWtim, dim. of (M (os»-), making a display from vanity or love of admi- [< Gr. mleo/offia, < mieon, bone; and see -oLO(iY.] bone.) os'sl-culel; ^^ditory oasl- ration or applause; ...oa-nlo'u- .1.. pretentious; boastful. — o»''te-ol'o-j£er, «. A specialist in osteology. Iniu; [-Li, Gles. (jjpf , J pf.].— oa-Hlc-'u-lar, a. Tme conrac* k not onlentalioun. osne-ol'o-glatt.- os"»e-o-Iog'lc or -Ic-al, Of. iM-rtaining to, or like "• ""*!'•«•: *, Eazaaox SocMt and SoUtudt, Courage fNwicles.— o«- p. a«. [H. K. « oo. '89.] o.— os''te-o-los;'l€--al-ly, «siti'•••'»"« »»'tV'>-fOn-, ,,. An instrument for o«s<;fO(]JIoa wUI suffen the joiala. ihnfdJ'^SJMrSe.inSn^ llou«. unnrctendlng. pressing against the upper teeth, and aliling the hearing Buczia Lay Strmotumt. ri. p. IW. [s. 'SI. — oa''tcn-la'tloua-Iy, adr. In a public manner; »' "eaf persons by the transmission of sound-waves falling 3. The state of being ossilled: also, an oaeifled part, pretentiously; boastfullv.- oa^ten-ta'tloua-iieaa, "P"" "• through Ihe hones of the cranium to the auditory oa'al-frace, es'i-frgj, n. l.Theosprey. 2. The 1am- n. The quality of or dis'lKisilimi to ostentation. nerve, as an andiplioiie. osteo- Gr. ;V(*i?, voice.] roergeier. [< + o«'len-la''lor*, n. One fond or display; a boaster. o« te-o-plasi", n. ISiime as osteoblast. ..,.,..„ . . "*'' Ominous; oeSTrSTJITfirillS.. " "^ "" "^1*°^ 1? "-'ei't'f'ilt,,". port4nUpu8. o«'tr-o-plaH"Iy, es'te-o-pliis-ti, n. Surg. An onera- "'-, ^"'»»';i»oaleo.,il)erivedfromGreeko«/fo„, a bone: combining tlon to miu^ly loss of We; trniisphiiXgof "r,^!J^ > K„ , ^ tone with ?.t;-'?^/?^ its place of oa'«|.ry,««'l-fai, r. a Imiie' temoorarilv reJ f-ri«D: -rr'iNo.J 1. f. To convert n,«,....i ...... , .•'•^ Pulsating tumor of a bone; enlargementnt of a Itone dued to moved. r^ osteo-— , ..5. .1 iiiUi lione; .. „ .i . [< 4- Gr. »V(«/-pli a 1. i. To lie changed into bone; ossiacstlon. cerofalmnc. '2. A tanceroiwtuuiorwlikh has nodergo become os- «,- .,.( Os'le-oa'trn-.n>ra-€i,-cl. hs»»-ien-osiro-soi«»trn «ol or -ei, li.,. pt..,i /,.i, a silled oa^teso-cau'fpr* fiH'l(>.«wi>l«>'' ,» , v Ich. A t < F. OMiHer. < L. »«"- e. ph"^. oCa, " %.z,. "a !;;i^ee'r:,t;i'' usually : grave-mound; as, the Indian OKn/aiy. il. Anos- Inflammatlon of a bone and lu adjacent carlIlages—oM^> saw like, especially for dividing a fetal ^,lrl III n. I-ma-ta, cranium to effect delivery. oa'au-a'rl-um;. Compare clhebarv. 3. te-o-cam'nia, /,/ i (me of a B<'rles of seg- [< osteo- + (ir. to««a, cut.] .\ 1. r«it mented bonea In a vertebrate' Kkeletal metamere.— ;. or hiyer containing fossil bones. [ < LL. ottua- a os^- oa''te-ot'o-niy, os'te-et'o-mi, n I s«rg The opera- le>ac'a>paa. n. Ptjl*o/Hone.ague; hone-ache: ri'iiti. < tmtuariuM. of b'aii, a *n 'if .,--;. U.S connecting the air-bladder and brain, inclu- Having a bony skin. aa''tp.o.drr;iiious:.-aH"le.o. oa"tP-rl'at, h. .\ liostelrv-OD'teaMet. n A hostess 'liii.' :lieplfCtos|K)ndylsand neinatognaths. i\x.fmta- dyn'La, n. /-nthol. ivn. stent pain In a l.one.-„»"i,.. [< „»'||.a. ee'ti-u. „. .V Ztjol 'I'he slit-lik'e o|M,iiliigsKre'na, ii. nuhol. Death or "!" mIIiii. lit iu4ff/,fi, lame I 4- pftijiitt. inort licallon of a ,1,,. bladder.] — oa-la^- "orsal,l7,~.il M-sselt.^l.l (heart),U.,.^^\^'i..as in insectsi ""f bone; necrosis. o«''Ie-o-Kan-Krte'na:.-OH"le.a. . and crustaceans. rl-o-pliy'aaii, /.. o»-la"rl-o-pliya'l-al. a. oilmiii; Kloi^ai'dtp. II. pi. Irh. A fainlli' of lM,„iiUmm,lp,i, P'',"' see osTIl'M.] oafar-lhrrila. «starthrai'tl» es. J^\-, or -thrl'tis. «. l>ulluM. lili ' os'ti ri-elally those » a compressed earlnated aMumen and ''* •'-••«• ak, n. 1 . One of a people living along Inflainniiitinn of the joints; chronic rheumatism. chln.l«irhBioM'aid, n -oH''lr.o.KiOK'aaid, a. language of this 4 n.-Oa". people, belonging to the Ugrici^i, i^ branchoiomn oa'te-al, oste-ul, a. of, pertaining to, or like bone; l«-o-»los-»ol'de.a, n. B/. A'/i. A superfamlly of ma a- of the Urnl-\ltaic"^ "" •^""'' """"fainil coptiTyg an flshes having the tall '••> —-• • "' (WH4-OI1S; Isinv. [< Cjir. o'/«on, bone.] •K'le-in, oa'tr-lne, n. Same as ossaix. "Ie-ril», (w'ttj-iji'iis or -I'tis, n. PatPathol. Inflamma- tion of Isuie.Isme. f< Gr. o»f«>», bone.] oa-ti'tlal. -oa"le-ll'lp, oa-UI'tc, a. Of, pertaining to, or allerle/.// --I llol A small opening in a peri- ot>"le-a>iiinl"ii-ro'iiia:i . be accented as genuine; s»-eining; profeasea; pretended: oa"'le-o-uia-ln'lii-aU thecium, or other ' "-- conccplacle. for the escape of -OM'^ie-o-nin-inVinl,II, II. oa"le-o-niu-lac'iet,- spores. often, though not alwavs, implying a concealment of or 0H'll'-O-IIIHIl"ly+, The art of divining with Inmes. The feninle conreptocle opens at the apex by an imtiole. divergence from the real facta. — «»' If- «- iiipre"* n. Saixw &» ()mtkim'omm.\.— oi*"- Bknnktt and MluRAY Cryptogamic Bot. chtaa i, p. '«7. [L. o. ft CO. 99. There wer« two si>veniin«nta, the real and the oatmstble. tr-o-my'VI-l'lNs u. Ptnhol. Indamnmtlon of tht-iuar- j MacaCLaT JSMUia, Warm HoMtlagii p. 4M. (A. tM.] rijw of a ImiM-.— on^'it^-o-niy'f l-on, ». Tlir marrow of 2. A nifnute opening on the vt-ntral surface of bupe. Theee being procured, a caravel waa [< deapatched with the otlm- L. ostiolum, dim. of mtiyin; see ostium.]- mtbie dMlga of rarnrioa prorWofai to the Cape de Verde islanda. ";- , linking ostioles. Uviaa (Maai»u voL 1. bk. i. ch. i. p. 71. (o. P. P. 'ei.j ais.n. Pathol. Same as .-ia. B.i..i«.-o»"te-o.pal''iii- '"T/ "•«.-'!. ,'*^' "' n. .Siirn. relm-aklng »"-';;,"- IL-l 2. [Kare.J Proper or intended to be shown; susceptible cla'-la. The of a frat^turedbwu' ,"™.;,»»-'°l'V,-'™^ A '"".' ."1*"^""' ''P<'clflcally: (I) Zo«;. llol. feaine as which has united^ unfavorably ~as"te-o-per''i-ot^ti<- , & of being shown. The valves the heart. lis, n. Piillwl. Inflainumtlon of the p^rlosteimT and °".Ti?,''*' '^'o"'' ^'""' of It ia that I act Same DM am amriUs bone.-aa'le-a.phor". «. Surgeons' forceps with long """,11 ""' "' as osteitis. To raerlta io themaelvea oatenalbte. tool.ihedhe laws, used for ex- ^___^ " tl-um, es'tl-um, 71. [os'ti-a, pi.] Anal. An opening Bvaoa EplMle/rom Murray to F^idoH at. 2. ... -^^a»^ _ into trading fragtiients of Imne. a passage or cavity; an orifice. [1.., < o», month.] (F.. < M.. iMUiiifil/itit, < I., onffndo; see ostkntation.] — oa'le-o-phyle", ti. A os'lier, OH^iler-pHH, w. Same as hostlkb, etc. Srnonrms: apparent, aiialgned. avowed, colorable, d Is- tony excrescence, oa'^le* os'ller-yt, //. A hostelry. pUyed, eihlhlteil expressed, plausible, professed, shown, oph'v-llat.- oh" Uat'mcn. nafinen, (: imV. E. t. S. W. Wr.), n. pi. Early speclotis. A man a apparent purpose or motive Is what ap- pleu'rn, riilhol. ("ssl" """^ Form of Osteophor. Danish settlers In Ireland. I < Dan. onf, east. -^maiirf.man.] p»*ara on the surface, with or without his own Intent; hlsai- lleatlon of urtllages connecting the ribs- ns'ie-op- »»•»'•», oetO'sis, ». The formation or growth of tone; lenMiitf motive or purpose Is that which \KiMJtiffnfd, arowfit. n. Piithol. aath^y-ro'sim Friability or hrlttleness of ossification. [ < Gr.

Ostraoea 134S Otoeyoninae Os-Ira ce-a, es-tre'sg-a or tro'ce-a, «. ji. Conch. 1 . oei'tri.cnI''tnre, w. Samcaa ostrkicultubk. Mrs. Browninff e creative power was not A Biiperfauiily or eulKinli-r of bivalves eqiiat to her capacity to having the man- o»-trlf'er-o«», os-trif'er-us, a. Producing or contain- teel; offterwtiiie there wan nothing «he mijfht not have accomplished ilo entirely open, a single ailductor, foot suppn-ssed, ami ing oysters. L. oelrifer, £. C. Stedman Victorian Poeta ch. t, [< < (W/rM (see oystek) + p. 145. [o. 4 co '76 i Bhell irregular and inemilvalve, a« in oysters," a. The /fro. bear.] 2t. On the other hand. Ottnida. [< Gr. o»7r(i*on, shell.] 0»'tro-goth, es'tro-geth, n. A member of the eastern otU'er= world , "dh'er-wOrld-, a. Of or pertaining — OB-tra're-an, n. ».— os-lra'oeou8, a. branch of the Goths, which , & established a great power to another world or to the future life. — olh'er-world"^ ©••|r«-<-l'I-die, tw-trasai'i-dt or -cr'i- t'>"-world"ly, Disposed toward a spiritual life. leaving only "• >*»me as the tail free; trunkflshes or bo.xliehes. [< Goth. (< LI.. Osliormtni,n. yH., < OUU. o*(a;-, east: J'Jl','"""•"* Ottomani. O.^TBAOioN.]— Olji maii-ee", 5th'man-f, o»"'tra-el'Id,«.—.- o»-tra'el-old,o.,„. and see GoTH.l — O«''»ro-gotli'ic, a. a. Ottoman; Turkish. [< os'Ira-clu(e, < ee'tro-sin. I. a. Ostreoid. II. n. An Os'lrv-a.es'tri-a, «. Bot. .\ small genus of trees of the „i,"'''*-./^"""""'' '''-^'^'"««' Osman I.l ostreid oakfamily(6'«/;«/iy«-a!), ";"••"/"*»'.•, et]i-iiai'i-dt or _ with very hard woofl, brownish -ni'i-de, n. j>l. En- Os-lra'cl-on, ee-tre'si-en or -trg'ci-on, n. 1. Ich. A furrowtd bark, ovaU- taper-pointed doubly serrate leaves "'"•, ^ fa'ndy of heteromerous beetles with anU'rior gfnus typical of 0«/nK-ii^>^ «' [< of French and other origin as, ^'- ""i^St-), mr, latreta, heaUng.] iji society or poliUcs. Gr. Ayitiq. ; bid W, parrot, pivoC + o"ll-at'rlrlos}. 2. Legal banishment Comnare j-t r,- .ni vor f of-«^-ET.] ,..'~",J*"*VV^.""'"' Anaurist. o'»l-a"ler$. «#' fflxjs * .•'«. 'ic, n.nr. (et'ic, /. S.) ^I'nXityity or originorigih in . .- - , (xiii), a. Of,....,pertain-pei ^^JeTmt 'eYseSt^ [o^^rth? T^'tl'^y^^^;. ^f found Eng- f., , — -ote,V"' ifiisi. woris_of '"?, "'' situated near the aear. 1 (Jr. whoseWhose absenceah«.„ce wasw.» desired.d„.i^ ... K„„.?.'..«."/..P!'TJi Greek descent;, as, Cy^prio^or .^1. °\ < Ulkm, < our: The banishment vvas for ' ,,r.), Scin/f idin/ nntrin/ r-- i .^/„ „/ Vf „v i ear.]-o..c g.ngHon; -smairgan<;iion"o";;'II ganirlion ten (later Ave) years, with restoration to property "«'-,„ "*'?,' "?'**• <^''- ;?'5*-] on oneTfone of and civil „/V,™''3',f ^ 1 h- the branches of the fifth nerve, near the standing when the term expired. The vote was given by" '"-cous'tlc, ta-cfls'tic, C. (-caus'tic, B. I. H ear. . o'll!da"ina, o'ti-da"ma, earthen tablets test*, efa-, -S. II lt>.). n. A game resembling or on which was Inscribed the name ' I. a. Promotive of hearing._ II jack- of the '"°* ""* * '"' "'" "----- ^'o™*' bags person to be banished, and the word (or the tablet An" instrument to aid the" hearing," as an eaf-tnTmi'xjt' P'*^?*!, **'"?, ^^n about an inch and a half (rave name to the process. «l™.'-«' Pa"'ally tilled with rice. [< J&r>- otedama, ,. , o"ta.oou«'«.font. [< Gr. InWfs, < ^»o \i/i«*) < In lU oS ;, dim. prefix, political character then, but in no other point, the Amer- ear, «/!-ok5, hear.l 0-, + fe, hand, + (amfl, ball.] Japanese in impeachment resembles + the Athenian ostmcimn. which was o'ta-eustt, n. A spv- scout. JaCKStonest.

shell. family of pinnipeds O-tl'na, ii. (t. g.) [ Gr. 2. Cr. ^n See •'• ^'''- Pficiple of the radiometer, for showing illus. A P«w^iPV,!h;r' f'J":'^®'""-!?'^ "i:^'- the seeming under bustakd. [L ,< Gri«# great busSrd^'"""^''' repulsion ^ *' *' ^"^ < jaw-bones and excited by light or heat in an cxEausted space^ ous (St-), ear.] ' ha,wXL„rthaving the head and.in'lb^'fthe front"^'V'S'l'i'''?''' of the trunk covered with [< Gr. «<*««, push, -scope.I o-H'tls o-toi'tis plates, including + or tt'tJs « Pn/bni Tnfl,.mm»ti„„ „f HeterpstraH and OHeostra^. [< Gr. oti.'er', udh'g?, «.' I. Diflerint from the one the oslrakon, specified; nmcous memb"?ane of the'eaf ["< Gr ehvU, -^ pherS, bear.]— os'tra-co-phore not the same: often correlative ™Sw°™r to «««(., and sometimes oto-, I Derived from «— os"tra-copU'o-rous, Greek om (St-), ear: combinine a. lollowed by than introducing a clause of comparison; ot-. forms.— o"to-clei's)9, O* •'•a-cos'te-l, f f,. Pal/uii Closure obstruc- es'tra-ces'te-oi or -t, n. nl. Ich as, other things occupy him; some """ of the men do tins, other ear.-o"to-co'iii.iiiii, u. '[-xi-a, jyj 1 A dl- The Placodermi. [< Gr. mtrakm, shell, 4- osteon, men that. minutlveminiiffvo simplet»i„i., .,,..u.i. „ ...... -.,._^ * "^...^ bone.]— ot<.llth. o-loc'o-nifei. - o"to^'o'- o8"tra-cos'te-an, a. & n.— 08"tra-cos'. I Bet my springe for other game than this, iii-al, a.— o't«-crnne, n. The honv Investment of the te-ous, a. aijditory AliDRlCH M'yndhum Towers St. 15. apparatus. o"lo-era'nl.uni;.- o"lo.cra'ni- Os'tre-a, es'trg-a, n. Conch. al, o''to-cran'ic, «.— o'to-cyst. n. An auditory 1 A genus typical of 2. Being over and above; additional; more; as, have vesi- - - - cle, as In many Invertebrates, Ostreidx.. filled with fluid and containing 2. [o-J An oyster of this genus. [L.; see you no o^/iej' children? 3. Second: noting the remain- an otolith; also, the similar vesicle In the embrvo verte- OYSTER. 1 — os^tre-a'ceous, ing of a -- a. Pertaining to an oyster; one of two persons or things of which the first brate.— like has o"lo-cyM'tie, «.— o"to-dyn'i-a, 'i<. Same as ,oJ'»'5';'*'>ell.-o8'lre-|.cul"ture, n. The been mentioned or 1 tliought of: generally OTALGIA.- artillclal.„(« 1 bri-edlng or with the definite o-toK'ra-pliy, ii. A sclcntllic description of rearing ot oysters; oyster-culture. article. Specifically: tneear.— (1) Opposite; contrary; as, theo-'"K [Archaic.] Of tory organ of many Inverte- "-«•<"' " One who feeds another sort; other, olh'er-irnise't uponSSSf™^'^""*""*-""'''oysters; oilier brates; an ear-stone: sometimes an oyster-eatcr. nininc [Archaic 1, some others: formerly often writ- ten as an Inch or more In length In <*'*"<=•> n. 1 very one word.— ofh'er-ward, mlr. in another direc- " .T',*-''' . A large, struthionoid bird U'leost of Africa and — tion, oth'er-wnrdisj.-oth'er-ways", adv. fishes, but In the high- Arabia, hav- Other- er animals only wise.- oth'er-whcri'", ii'ir. In some other place; small parti- ing only two toes, corre- else- cles. where.— otli'ei'-wliile", 'I'ir. 2. An ear-bone, o'lo- I Archaic] Atsome other sponding to the third and lite}. titne; Bonietlines. olh'ei'-« hiles"t.- tLe other"-"c. «»,,day. — o"ro-litli'ic. o''to- fourth of other birds. It is a day not long ano; recently. O lit'lc. a. Of or pertaining to the largest of existing Otoliths from otoliths; constituting an birds, olh'crn, a., pro?!., &coni. Either; or. onth'erti oyth'- the Human otolith; reaching a height of 6 to S Ear. ecmtalning <.t<.llllis — o-tol'o- feet, and has a long gist, «. One versed skilled naked otli'er, irron. , . , , or 1 . A different person or thing; one not In otology; an aurlst.- neck, aborted wings, and the o-tol'o-gy. n. The science of the same as the one specifled or considered. ear and its diseases; long, powerful legs, giving It a treatise on the ear.— o"to-log'ic- Tliere is no better thing great speed. Only one spe- , . which we can do tor others than to be <""•.- o"t«-aiy-eo'»ifi. n. Ililliol.?J',."rS.v'"''"'''''^-"'-'>' cies (.Struthio cnmeliu) Is ^"'^ Spiritual Conferences, Kindness 1 he presence of fungi In the audltorv canal, or the ch"! SoTj 'ffil resulting generally recognized, with a disease.— ctop'a-lhv, ii. fiit/iiil. A diseased variety (auslrallHi In South 2. The second of two, one having been mentioned or c(>iidltld(K,w L,>-i-i(iii i-uttT. n. in.pi. Helminth.nKiiutniN. i\ fainilvlainiiv ofoi {molj/b- ; the opposite one: often with the definite ar- A marico-mar: doplMnm) In lous planarians with otocysts. Somall-laiKl. ticle, and often rcci])rocally, especially in the phrase «acA 0"lo-pla'ii'a, >i (t g.) The plumage of the male Is —,« to-plan'ld, » — o-tnp'la-noid, ".— o'lto- ottur; as, here is tlie other; they helped each other. " " black, with white plumes at pla»"ty Surij. Plastic surgerv of the ear to- Souls, once intimately related,haA-e the end of the wings and tall, ... a strange power of af- plnn'tie, «.— o"to-por'pa, «. 'Ziiniih. .A centripetal IK et - - HABHlErr B. Stowe process of '" - much esteemed for ornamen- Minister's Wooing ch. the marginal ring connecleed' with 27, p. 111. [D. '59.) " tal purposes. In some place- Jt J. ulocyst, as In narcomedusans.- _ lo-por'pal It Is reared and domesticated oth'er, adv. Otherwise; as, he could not do other than to-py''or-rht''a, ii. J^ilhol. ilisciiargeof nnsfronuhe ear. on large ostrlch-farms. The Ostrich. Compare Illus. commend her. p"to-py"or.rha''aJ.-o"to-py-o'8i8, n. Sup- under biiea. puration of the ear.— o"tor.rha'gi-a, «. Itilhol. HU imagination resembled the otit'er-iiess, udh'er-nes. re. The quality of Hem- being other orrhage from the ear.- wmgs of an ' " ^- ... ™l"»i™ .„ ...I.,.- ti-i i— . o"lor-rhe'B, )(. Discharge ostrfcA. It enabled him to run, though not to soar or in relation to other things; also, that...... = from Macaulay which is other- the ear o"tor-rhie'a{.— o"lor -rhe'nl, o"tor- Essays, Dryden p. 48. [a. '80.] as, non-being is tlie olhenms of being. rhre'al, i«), bird: ulum. stnithio. < fir. stronthiSn, ostrich, < strou- «""*»« than I thought. —o-to'HiN. >i. False Impression of sounds; a mis- hearing, or a word originating tAot, bird.] auM'trldKCt; os'trtdsct. otli'cr-tvlse", adv. 1. In a different in a inl8hearlng.— o-Io»'le- manner; in an- al, I, a. Of or pertaining •<''''' other way; differently. to an otosleori. II, n. .\n '!; A wainscot. -o.. otosteon.— f^£.''^''*^^,'*"'^T'^"^'place where ostriches o-tOH'te-on, n. 1, An ear-stone; otolith. are rmred for commer- As for his wound, how could cialJtarSi'r^^purposes.- c.farining, K.— it do otherurlse than well under •i. An ear-bone, as of a flsh.— O'-tot'o-niy, «. The dis- o.sfern, «. A tall and such hands I Holmes Pages handsome fern from an Old Volume essay ii, p. 70. section of the ear. (Oiioclm .StrutlilopterU, or ,V(r»(*tonfcrS |H....„.,M. A CO. OernuiTUca) with sterile 83.J o-to'ba.bui"ter,^ o..rat, n. See fronds 3 to '"" i" business. o«I«'er-lyt: "-'»«">-»-mV"T.' o-tosM-o-nalnt or -tO'cl-o-nl'n^ «. pi. i.rt^„ i.' i—ti-,-.- ; A otli'er-weves'"t-J jananhydrold (^liftoppAenta «(r«(AtonWe«) of California otIl'er-wvse"t. ' >• Mam A subfamily of <•«;»,(;(. with J6 or 48 teeth. Including re«mblfng " " . dimlnutlve.ostrlch.featber. oth'er.«,l«^''. r^„ 1" of" the lower jaw. [ < Otocyon.1 1., Bat for the cause named; else. oTil'^'y^nT'ol^T.- "t«-ey'o-niM(e, a. & n. sofa, firm, gsk; at, fare, Record; elgment, $r = over, eight. usage; tin, machine, | = renew; obey, no; not, nor, atjm; full, rule; but, bum; aisle: » - ! ;

Otoiuian 1249 out

0-(o'iiil-an. oto'mi-an, n. A Middle-American Unguis- den'o-don, n. (t. g.) [< Gr. oudeis iouden-), none (< -ous, ^<^.r. Vsed: (1) To denote possession or presence tic suick. St'f Ameuican. O-to'mlt. om, not, + de, but, + heis, one), + mious {odont-), tooth.] of a quality in any degree, commonly in fulness or abun- «t'o-uiyt, »- same a« ATOMY2. — ou-den'o-doiit. a. & n.— ou-den"o-don'- dance. CZ) Cketn. To denote a compound in which the O'lo-zO'um. /(. gigantic verte- o'^to^zo'iiiu. A Tnassie tld» ».— ou-deu"o-don'totd, a. element to which it is affixed has a less valence than brate. probably a dmoeaunau reptile, known only by its ought, et, r. lOught \» used chiefly as auxiliary, ex- in compounds whose names end in -ic. [< OF. -ous^ F. 4-toed footpruit*. Cir. Oto*. a mythical giant, [< + 25o/», pressing obligation or fiuiese.] 1. To be under moral -eux^ < L. -oms; or directly < L. -w«.] animal.] obligation to be or do; be bound in duty or by the prin- onset. V. & H. Ooze. 0c-»e'80 baHHt et-el'gC bgs. Tbe common whlteflsh. ciples of right. au'»elt 71. Same as ouzel. ol'tar. Ht'ur, «. Same as attae. au'sn, n. [Scot.] He has not a rifht to do what be likes, but only what he ought ou'sen, Oxen. ot-lK'va. wt-tflva. }i. [It.] Muit. An octave. Qu'set, with bis own, whicn aft^i- all is liis own only in a qaali6ed sense. VV. ou'set, «. [North. Eng. & Scot.] A hamlet. et-tfl'va [It.] ot-la'vA rl'ma. rt'ma. iVtw. A stanza S. LthLY On Right and Wrong, Summary p. xxvi. [c. * H. '90.] oust, oust. vt. 1, To turn out from possession or occu- of eiirbt iambic lines, of eleven syllables each (or, in Keaolve to perform what you ought; perform without fail what pancy; disseize; eject. 2t. Totakeaway; retnove. [< you resolve. Frankllv AutobUtg. vol. '74.] BIngHsh, often of ten), the first six lines riming alter- i. pt. i, p. 229. [1-. OF. omter, F. oter, < L. hauiio (pp. haustus), draw.] nately aud the others forming a cotmlet: used by Spen- 2. To be fitting, expedient, or imperative; need to l>e or Synonyms: see banish. ser in minor poems, by Byron in "Don Jnan," and by to be done: behoove: befit; as, this ought to be investi- oustf n. Same as oast. Keai^ in " l.-*aV*lIa.'" Compare octave; terza rima. gated. 3. To be required by logical necessity; be reason- ousCer, aust'gr, /(. Laiv. The act of putting one out ol'^ta-vi'no, «i'ta-vIno, h, I It.) A piccolo. ably exRt'Cted as the result of some computation, argu- of possession or occupancy; exclusion rrotn poeseesion OlHa-\%'aM. ot'a-waz. n. pi. A tribe of North-Ameri- ment, or inference from known facts; be a means to or and enjoyment; dispossession; as, ow*7er of the freehold can Indiana of the Algontian stock, formerly living on condition of; as, the two sides of the ledger otig/it to an at/jf/ifr of chattels real. [OF.; see oust.] the OttJiwa river, but later moving to lands southwest balance; with these changes the machine cmghf to work. Ouster of the freehold is effected by . . . Abatement, IntmsioD, of Lake Superior. See American. Every New England deacon ought lo see one Derby day to learn Diweisia, Discontinuance, Deforcement. ot'ter^ ot'^r, //. 1. A lutrine musteloid or weasel«like what sort of a world this is he lives in. HoLMES Our Hundred Blackstone Commentaries bit, iii, ch. 10, p. 167. carnivore having webbed Day* in Europe intro., p. 8. [H. M. ft CO. *S7.] —Judvinent of ouster« the judgment rendered In a quo warranto feet. bn)ad depressed skull, 4t. To befit; behoove: used impersonally; as, "well proceeding against an Intruder In a public of- llce.— o. le Old Eng. Luiv. The surrcnderof and carnassial teeth, inhab- twg'Af uswork," Chaucer C. T., Second Nun's To/tf 1.14. main. 1. landfl by hand ot the sovereign on judgment In favor of the St. Imp, t. & pp. of OWE, V. 6+. Imp. t. of own, iting istreams and lakes and & pp. petitioner in an action of monstrans de droit. For- r. AS. ditte, *J, fetnling upon fish. The [< pret. of dgan, owe.] oasntet. merly, the delivery of a ward's lands out of the hands of the common otter (Liitrn rul- Synonrms: »ltonUl. 0«o>*t is the stronger word, holding guardian on the ward's becoming of age. gftri'o i»f the World Is most closely hi the senue of moral obligation, or sometimes Old out, out, V. t, t. 1 . To deprive of anything by expul- about feet exclusive of iiiiperaiive logical necessity; nhould may have the sense Z lonjf. sion; drive out; expel; eject; oust. of itie long tapering tall. and of itioral obliifatlon or may applv merely to propriety or ex- ' They could furnl^heft a valuable dark^ pediency, as in the proverb. The liar nhouUl have a good before the eipiration of their term be legrally outed of their lease, by a new purchaser. hruwn fur. The North- iiuMiiory, " i. e., he will need it. Adah SMITH Wealth of Na- / tions bk. iii, ch. 2, p. 310. [a. M. ft S. 70.] '(ttt'n/. '•'/;(«(/'•;( 4»ue;lfet>,n. adv. Augbt; anything. American "'"'"^ & «*) is larKer. Ptrronurtl ' • » ouslit^, n. A cipher; naught: acomiption. 2t. To give out; make known; publish. 3t. To sell. KfimltMirhi is the wiii«-tailed otter of South America. ouffBfS^ ft. [Scot, or Obft.] Possession. II. i. To come or go out; beromovwl; be disclosed. iiiri . „ . ^ Murder will out. that see we dav by day. least; atal). (£//ia/'w A«/«'//(). which attacks hope. 4, A contrivance auvhl'linsti ousbt'llnst. Chaucer C. T., Nun'a Priest's Tale 1. 890. for fishing consisting of a float with hooks, usually fly- oui?i»*'«><'«*». "t'nes. /*. iKecent.] 1. The quality of [< AS. utian, < ilt, out.] ' h(K)ks. 5. An ancun j^lieep. {< AS. o/er, otter.] being owed or morally due; obligatoriness: said of a outt, «. ISemotely situated: foreign. Brazilinii olier, the coypou.— oi'ler»ca-noe^, "ght action. 2. The condition or relation of being out, «. 1. An outer nook or comer; an outside place, ,_. . n. A rilender, t-harp-ended. kalak. used. by sea-otter banters^ _ bound by the moral law or to right conduct; moral obli- space, or part, as an outwardly projecting angle; also, In .\LaMkA —H.ihuuud, n. One of a breed of wlry-halred. gation: said of a moral agent. 3. The feeling or sense an outer aspect of a matter, as in the phrase in^ and outs. reddlsh'dun bounds, used for hunting ottert. o.xloff*.— of moral obligation involved in conscience: regarded by 2. -\ person who is out; anything on the outside or with- a.*iihtf«*pt n. An anrun.— o.ffiliellt n. A large macTrold some 8s the ultimate idea in philosophical out; specifically, hi the plural, the party, especially ttivalve (genus Lutrtiria), as L. ruaxima, extensively used ethics, in polit- as fiM>d on the northwesn-ru coast of the United States.— place of rightness or equally with it. Compare cate- ical, that is not in control; the opj>osition. 3. In proof- reading, o.iMhrew, /<. A potaniugaiold aquatic Insectlvore havlnc gorical imperative; ethics; R1UHTNES.S. printing, etc., matter omitted, or the place where

H wca^t-Miki- hotly Dititjiiiit'd into a comprciacd natatorial There ia a prior onestion. Why ou^fht I to do riirht ! which «how the water was let out; lo let out a secret; to pour out a Same a» vixh. liquid; to break '»«(; at the Of the svoBinc Otto ot Bona oulo-. o«( elbows. (2) From a speel- •n'lttaffi n. Same as oolono. fled or usual place or counwilon; as, he set out from Paris HOO;\x>D MiMBKUmatmeoff^Htr Birth tL 11. •^'•^fl\*' ^^"'^ . ,, , .. , ,^ , , ., , yesterdav; to tear o«i a page from a book; to call one o«( to fltrbt. (3) Fn»ni among others, as by selection; as, he waa left out In the count; to pick imt two. 2. In a condition as of having issued. (1) Forth or (rv-i.-n.-l l->«.l:W;;.»uma.n..l.4/.5/,«i(The(om,u.™r) away: («» As from Indoors, or from a stated or normal „. Hemorrh.ge from ,„^^ ^^, place or misltJon; as, to go out on the street; a day out; the «hi> wul)li»hfV8fus. Water and Wood ~ Midnight ac. S. The implidt and rrliakiai lojrmltr of th« Otlomm0( aatloa to ih. weight. See WMOHT. (b) Outward bound; as, the ship Is four days out. (c) ( Hoow^ of ithinsn . . . baa lieM uiifona and aadimiafaliad. Haaiy 111. lof EaalandJ enactad that an ounce thonJd be the UJi Hence, archaically, In foreign parts; as, he has been out tnm that f.iiiiljr alone that the Padlakak (kha Eaaparor). tha ZO* walffht of MO arr Knunaor wheat from the middle of the ear. several years, (rf) Actively engaged, as on duty; as. the Vllah I the .hadow of (iodi, (tka Saltan), , n. I. A feline carnlvoroua mamma) (FelUun- a loss (Of so much); as. I am out fifty dollars through him. (< K ollomane. t. ot oUormm: ace Ottoman, a.] eia) of central Asia, about (8) No longer actively engaged, as In a game or contest; as, ""'' the striker Is out; the pugilist was knocked out In the tenth •'Kirr'"*'!*"' "iH-"; ^"^i; * ^•'[.'".P^t.'h.'"?*' the aize of the leopanl, but brittle lllll-ai eous Hlllcate, reionbllns CblorlloW, of doubt- „» , l|„hter eolnr in.l h«v round. (9) Away so as to be In error; wrong; as, he was Jul e.,nip...ltlon and uncertain crj-auiiauon. '[< Oure,. ?„' out in bis reckonlUK; the soprano Is out. (lO) So as to be ing"i^B^/Clonger rur, leaa1™ aiaunctdLtinct Belitlum, whir.- It fM-rum. T-I.ITE.1 visible; somewhat developed; as, the buds art; out In bloom. 'pot^ o'«i thick ou-a'baln, D d'ben, ». A poiaoiHNu taratalllne com- i '""S (11) In known existence or observation; as, the finest team pound iC,„»„«),,i contained In the nmt and wood of t^'- •"oun'taln.pan'- out; the worst poet out. the oualmlo. u«-(l in medicine a« as aneatbeUc, and by »ner;; unow^'lcop'- .^..^.^^ 3. In a free, open, unreserved way or manner; com- the native., of Africa aa ardi. 2. »uiiie Miinlar |bL^^j|^ pletely; thoroughly; as, he shouted out; call out the an arrowpolaon. ^*-^ •u-n-bal'e, n-o iKiin, ». [H. Afr.J A Sooth-African plant American eat, a» the ja^iiar. *" names. 4. So as to rid of something obstructing or en- F.on«, prob. Per. cumljering; as, ''••r. ""'•',';;' '''-'.''''"!,?' ""« niKhtahade family, [< < ySz, TbeOuncctAWto uucia). /« to thrash out grain; clean out the bam. • -'br=oll", n^i i".«ir. n. Seeoii. panther, lynx.] oncet. 5. To a conclusion or end. (1) To exhaustion or extinc- ••kn'ri, »'.i ki'i rl. n. Same aa lAKARt. oundt, ». A wave; anything wavy. «« a curl; especially, a tion; as, to ball out a boat; the poison ate out his eyes; the ounn^drr-oo', ». saiii" i» u A.xuaaoo. lace, ounde^.— ound'ingt, n. A waving or curling. light went out; the milk Is out. onn/'rlne', w.jriii .n ,. riii. /. H'r.; wgTJn', IT.), n. [F.] uundl, ./. //<•;. onn'dy, 1. Same as uxot. at. Waving; What a constant jealouHV gnaws your heartl It tires me out. A llrizllliii li..*linK-in..Mk.y. rw.| curly; wavy, Scalloped. ound'ingt. 3t. t ati t.t\t P«afu>A* Ufl-.A w-.iA-a- [ vlrli an entranrr —•ph'eDt, a. Etflsh. ontet. iiiu. and of enron- In the following self-explaining compound verl>s, out adds -oar» gtiffix. Same aa -or. ' ' »:• '1 pit or well. Into the sense of surpassing or exceeding, denoting tbe extension aur, jjom. proa. Of or pertaining to ns; belonging A !iU h v,riv lured or thniat pemoiu oor, of the action or quality, usually meaning 'more than, tons; as, atter outhiss iMi-rn'rK u-rfl'ri, /i. [S. Am.] Same ascDRARE. outri'lgu outstep '//a/ tr. br J. A. Srmooda, outbeg An OnbUette. fiii're-bi, ft're-bl. H". lOre-bl, E.\ uu're-bl, C; -bal, /.), n. outJuggle outrlng otitstorm . lJO.p.41. |R. a w. llR.] outbleat ,_ [S. Afr-l A BCO[>ophorlne antelope outknave outrival outfttride IF., < OHbli^r. forffpt. < L. nhltrfjtrar, foryet.] {yanotrnf/ua m.opeIow and with Mraluht, out blush out leap outromance outsuffer outbluster -^'Hiament of gold; (vptriajly, a brooch or claap. 3+. A strongly annulated horns, o'ri-blt. outiuster outsail outswear outbow (bau) out maneuver outscent outswlftt m from a boarV tu*.k. 4t, boll or akhi-tumor. ourret'lC' '' Same as t kktk'. A outbrazen outman-b outscold onttalk n uourh, mUlividiHl an ouch. Sofich, < OF. '*^^"; m J-;":'*^; 'V„ S ^^/"^^n^^' outbrllKj outmeasuret out see outtoll 'rh^. < OIK*. roiMda. brf)orh.l oarhef: owclirt. ^ ' outcant outmove outsin outtravel "V"' I Ouri -oucWvr*, n. One who made ouches. ou-rol'o-Ky« ou-roM'co-py* etc. outcheat outnois4- ontslng out venom ourh. interj. An exclamation indicating aslight pain or same as i koi>>aY. etc. outctimb out paragon outsit outvltdlt twingi-, oiilrht. oufm, ourz. pomh. pron. See ocr. outdare out passion outHleep outv()ice outdazzle ou''df*u-arde^, (I'den-Oril', n. .\ kind of decorative our-»»elf'. aur-self. y/ro/*- Myself: outplay outRoar outwalt ouldrink otitpray outsound out weep lapCKlry, n-pn-M-nting foliage and landM-apes, formerly used in the singular onl>- In formal oute(iuivocatc outprea(!b out sparkle outwortht manufnrtund ;tt Oiidemirde. B<*lginm. or regal style, generallv after «'^ or ii«. The Ourebl. outfawn out race out 8 peed outwrite Ou-deit''o-don'li-da>. n den'odnn'ti-dt t>r -d^, ». /V. our-wlve*', aur-selvz'. pron. pi. Phrases ou t of.__. 1_ ._ From or beyond the Inside of: Herp. A TriiL->«ir fjonilv of nnonHMlont reptiles, clow- Weorus; not others: used reflexively. or intennively with denoting; motion or derivation from an inner, central, or ly related to IHcyfiodontidx^ but without teeth. Ou- we; as, we hX&tav ourselves; we ourmveti v^iW help. orlgliwl place; as, out Q/'the house: pick an apple out qfthe

t ovl; 911; iA = fetnl, |9 s fnwre; e s k; charcli; Atk^thex so, sine ^P^'% •o; thin; ash = arare; F. boA, dttne.

pile; curses procwdcd ont qf his mooth. 2. Beyond the gtiiehed from an outbreak.— oafbiirsC'-bank", «. The out'fleld", aut'flld', re. 1 . In baseball, cricket, round- limits, re»ch, scope, or proper ptwitlon of ; not In or included middle portion of a hydraulic emtiankinenl, as a eea-wall. ers, or any similar game, the players collectively who In; «8,OK< Q/" sight; OKI ^r memory; an ankle out q^ Joint; Itjies on the footluK and supports the swash-bank. occupy the outer part of the field; also, any one of those OK«l/^fuhlon. Without: as,««(o/'breath; oiKQ^money, [Scot.] distance; outlying, 3. oul'by", autbol", ri<(r. 1. At a nlavers or the field occuoicd bv them SDCcificallv (1» -••t of character, not In keeping with pront-r char. -i. Mining. Toward the exit; outward: opposed {o (reftj,. '"\„lriri^ drfve on?.™ lonB-"n.iZuloff »«>and loKes'.'S- ?2\ '"In cter, unhecoming. - am of common. extnior- or out-car'ry. outK-arl, vl. To carry out; export. '• '?"K"" '""I? [V ,^h u. i baseball, right-, left-, cent«r- field, or all tlie field l)c- reiii»i*«ble; unusual.- out onVnmp. not in propershape; „„(',.„«»*, QUt'cgsf, a. Rejected as unworthy or use- and a secure '»»»«''• illue. under [Scot.l in disorder: Imwilar.- out of lin i-iii\i( way. In ip^„ especially by one's friends or by society; cast out: y""^ ">« See baseball. 2. not level In the plice; beyond dangi'r.— out ol level, tlo^rrmlrd- forlorn 0) Arable land contmually cropi,ea without Ijeing treated "-fth manure: opposed to i„Mj. (2) Any ope,, field mlatV^mable' «»• l^fa"*'', "• 1 • One who is cast out, particularly from ^ n?j2t?'illSSSbTe"or' -"i'u t" o? Xhl d.sWnce from the dwefimg, but belonging t» the Sli^RaTofTi^usuaVexcXf/Jiors^^ home or country; one rejected and despised, especially at a '«"»• 3. A bordering region or domain; an exterior plied promistuously; as. Ihe play was o«(V-""».''''. «ii. 1- 879. »rta.-out of the hood tfV/.-,,,,™,, flown from the list. ^ "" , »""*" "'rfHted hfs ciltV^ a barlah „ . ^„ , clear of dyulits and difflcultles; dc Qut'ftld-sr Any- player in baseball, -oat of the « pods, «.' One wlii or that which is cast out; an oul'fleId"er, «. not „,„/,.„,„.i„gt, Urered from liad circumstances: safe.- out ot touch, offBc'mirluK- outcast etc., whose position is in the outfield. Inaccord.syiniKithy.orhannony.-out ot twist, iTiud. „„,.„, |,'m,t.cacir, t)<. [Prov.Eng.l To overtake. oilt'flt, aut'fit, r. I. ^ To provide with fit instruments or articles; eqmp. H. *. to acquire an outllt. 2[a?j!.^f,i;SX:!^ru'ror«'r3;'„K!Slf;;s?fi^rh^f??p„rfVr.:r;rr'''^ <>«i«-fla»i»'. ?'i'-cl98 vt. To cause to take inferior stand- Feb.. '92. 374. the way, to murder or slay one, especially for the purpose , Juuan Ralph in Barper's 3I,mthly p. mg; exceed skill or quality: usually in the passive. of getting rid of him. m out'flt, re. 1 . A fitting out or equipment, as for a voy- out, aaUprtp. 1. (Colloq. or Obs.l From the inside of; o«H'«'lear"aiiee, out'citr-ans, re. A clearing from a age or expedition; the requisites or necessaries for any port, as of a ship. forth from; as, throw it tw/Mhe window. Compare out ^ journey. 2. Hence, tlie expenses occasioned and inci- of the OT. 2. [Poet, or Obs.] Outside of; without. 3t. Beyond. out''elear"lngr, aut'-cltfing, re. In the usage dental to such journey. 3. [U. 8.] The preliminary ont, inUri. Go out: away! begone! an exclamation of London clearing-house, the total amount m cliecks and allowance formerly made to a minister or diplomatic anger or impatience. bills of exchange standing to the credit of a bank at the agent going abroati on government business. 4. The — out on or upon, Bhame upon; as, o«( on you! clearing-house: opposed to In-dearlng. J. Herbert tools or equipment for any particular occupation, calling, aufact'. "^. ont'^acl'. r. I,/. [Rare.] To do or go beyond; TniTTo-n Letter to Standard Diet. '^&y \^, or trade- a kit- as a painter's 0'///t7 °'*°'*- OUt'cOmC'', aut'CUm", re That which comes out or 1 . ^he notion .pp;ar;,„ lie .preadin^ tha.'lhe™ mu., W «,™e .., out«of-S?fa'"""<1? <>'; beyond tI' pass round the ""g'oVn^ tTiJlfflT gSull'is' o?M^J,;,"caL^^^ "0 ""^f '«r>' oiT-flauk^', Qutlpk' S ^^ 'as ;^^^^^ "'"'k "' "1^". «« »;et the better of a li£e maneuver. SSi°''\-m,'i;iu!l'!:d1y:%"Sly 'oX IlllflcruSfc'-^iancerrf TrpVSfboldly°-°SS^^^^^ : V excel in fljishing; oal'=and.ool"er.« IColloi.orSlang.l One who is out- IJIIJTJJS;.',;/? '/(""^^^^'uter cou?t out-flash', out-flash', v. I. (. To and.out: one who Is thoroughly this or that: one nreemiuent „„,.,.rack't,' i!« 1. To excel- outshine 2. To outbrag outshine. in respect: applied to things. any sometimes [I.] out-crnfl'yt, rt. To exceed In craft; overcome with craft. But the glint of his jewels and glow of his gold diverted no eye OU'larde, U tOrd. n. IF.l The Canada goose. OUt-crnU't. from the calm, sad tavo which in the day of battle could ouylnah "87.] ou'tas+, r/. To cry out loudly. out-creep't, r/. To creep out. them ail. Blackmore Sprint/ftaeeH ch. 5. p. 20. [h.

f", aut'fling', re. A satirical jest; taunt; gibe.

, aut-flO', ri. [Poet.] To flow outward. ."• " •", aut'flo-, re. That which flows out, or the oui-uoi- w>>. .MO.. ouL,co,.i^.»". "J ".."^»ii""=. ,- , - - out-bear't, Pt. To bear out: substantiate. of rocks in situ. process of flowing out; efflux; effusion. out-bid', out-bid', t)(. To bid more than; offera higher out'erop", out'crep', re. The exposure at or above the oui'flush", oufflush'. re. IKare.] A sudden glow of heat price than out-bld'4ler, n surface of the ground of any stratum or vein, dike, orde- or rush of fluid; hence, an outburst. oui-blagt't, r. To blow out. posit of rock; also, tlie rock so exposed. out-fly', Qut-floi', r<. To outdistance in flight; fly with out-blaze', out-lile/.', tt. To obscure by a brighter out-cry't, r(. To cry louder than; iience, to excel. more endurance or speed than, blaze- excel in blazing ont'ery", aut'croi", re. 1 . A vehement or loud cry or out-foot', out-fut', vt. INaut. Slang.] To outsail; go faster clamor; a Cry or Cries of distress, Opposition, Or alarm, than: said of a vessel. A tide of gorgeous eloquence rolls on from beginning to end [of ,,. , ^ To the \igilant belongs the honor of defendmg the cup. . . . She Paradise I»st]. like a river of molten gold; oittblazlny . . . every 2. A public auction; sale by auction. ... Ollt/ooted her competitors at every point. thing ot the kind in any other poetry. CraIK £nff. t«. Olld Synonyms: see NOISE. _ ^"'' >"rk Heraia Sept.l.!. »3. .,ool. 1. inni/.. ftx-tn, o/ 2lfi»on in vol. ii. p. 94. [s. '69.] out'scut", out' .cut", «. Fonned by Cutting away a part. p. n. Outward appearance, oat'blown"t, a. Swelled out with wind; Inflated. oul-du'cious, out-de'shus, «. [Pfov. Eng. & Vulgar.] Au- out'fprm"'t, QUt'ljOrd-. JVatit. I. o. Situated on or daclous: acorruptlon-out-da'cious-ness, re. out'board", ;.'!f^^'"/A.7^!ti«OUt'lor(ht,«rf». Svn'.Si?.Externally; outside.ont.i,i„ directed toward the ontaide of a veaspl- not inboard- as Oft-'Ja'tedt, a. Antiquated; out of date. Qut-ais'tons, out-frown', uut-fraun', rl. To put down by frowning ^J/,f n,e out-dl«'tance, vt. To outrun SO far as to theulL^^/Wr,/ouiooard works.wo?k« II.II adv. AwayyWav fromfmm the center,^nter: ,u„ re. parish, .„„„i, winninir.nostmning-post lieforeueiore a competitorcomnetitor reaches the out'=fu"ner-alt, A funeral held out of the or as, to swing the davits outboard. ^ ^ , , distance-post?^?,„„„„ ^ (see distance}; hence, to oufbolt't.rt. To bolt out. surpass ^ery „„^,> ^j,„ "[Archaic] An outer yard or garden. greatly; completely outdo; distance out'bond", Qufbmid-, «. Arc/i. Laid parallel to the Th" atmosphere of the house wa, like » .piJcgarden and the out-do', Qut-dO', H. To exceed fn performance; sur- face of the wall: said of a brick, and opposed to tnlond. g„den itself as gay as if it was an oati/artft of Paradise. oui'born", aut'bsm", «. [liare.) Foreign; not native. pass; excel.— to outdo oneself, to do better than ever ameua e. Baer Friend Oltria ch. is. p. 254. [d. m. * co.] before; out-bound', out-baund', rt. To excel in swiftness or make a supreme effort. oat'ifate"+, re. A way out; outlet, activity- bound ahead of out'door", Qut'dor-, a. 1. Being or done in the open out-gaze', out-gez', rt. 1. To stare out of counte- oofboiind", aut'buund-, n. Outward bound. air; belonging or occurring outside the house; m,otit- nance. 2. To gaze farther than. out'bounds'', aut'buundz', re. p(. Outward or outermost rfooy employment; omMoot sports; o«(rfoor exercise. 2. out-gen'er-al, out-jen'sr-Ql, t:^ To surpass in gen- boundaries. Outsideof certain public institutions; not in almshouses; eralship by an advantageous disposition of forces or use out'boived", aut'bod', o. Curved or bowed outward; as, the ow<(/«)/- pauiiers or relief. out''Of>door"t. of the means at hand; outmaneuver. bent out. —outdoor stroke (Mack.), the outward stroke of a out'gie, aut'gl, n. [Scot.] Expenditure; outgo. Cornish puinpliig-englne. out-bras', aut-brag', t-f. 1. To excel in bragging; out-glve', out-giv', t-r & t-i. To surpass in liberality, outdo in boasting. 2t. To surpass in beauty. out'doors", out'dorz', n.' (out-dorz', C; aufdorz', „,,|,.riare' aut-gli!r' rl To excel in brilliancy. rt. awake, 14'.^), re. [Colloq.] The world beyond the house; the oui-braid't, To a-bray't. j,„t.5o', aut-gO', t' I. f. 1. To go farther or faster out-brave', aut-breV, t:(. 1. To surpass in bravery opciiair. out'^oftdoors''}. than; excel in any way; go to greater lengths than; out- or audacity. 2. To stand m defiance of. out'doors", aov. Out of the house; in the open air; distance. 2+. To circumvent by stratagem- overreach. abroad. out'=of>doors"J. Where on the £agle.height the walls oiif.fimre All time. II. i. 1 . To go Outward. 2. To come to an end. R. M. MU.SES Oreece, Return of Ulysses »t. 4. out-driiw', aut-_dr6 surpass In draw- '^l' .}-J^°]^° o„t/g„/', aiifgo", re. That which goes out or is expended; 3. To excel in splendor or comeliness. <'<"" "• outlay: opposed to income. oul^dreani' out-dr'lm° i;! 1 Archate f To dream hevond ^" '"•'''"' '"''"'>''"^- *+-T»""fcc«utirian?r„f'fcSlnL''^^^^^^^^ Synonyms: se'e'E.xPENSE "^^-,V'?0,.Se;rf;;',^;-..,?vemit or breathe out noisily. out'dress"t, re. Holiday dress; festal attire. out'Ko"er, aufgo-fir, re. One who goes out; one whole out brek', burst out; , forth., .v, ouf'break', ri. To break „m.dure't, j-(. To outlast. leaving, as a house, country, oflice. or business position. out'break", aut'brek', re. A sudden and violent break- ont-dwell'+, rt. To stay een pent up or re- out'dwell"er, out'dwel'jjr, re. [Eng. 1 One who holds H. M. Field Gibraltar ch. l. p. 2. [s. land in a parish, luit elsewhere. strained; said especially of manifestations of passion or dwells [W.l out'ffo"tng, aut'go'ing, o. Going out; leaving, as a "'''/"'''f.*'^,' of disease affecting large numbers of people at once; as, "'."'"vliJl,. yb?i'i''lr„''!!l'',w.'fi'l'J'°S,^'l?I;' I»rt place, or position; as, an outrjoing vessel; the out- revolutionary »«f^«a!-,- an yellow . »„^6r.«* of fever. JS^'^S; TVKv. fe fel wrtSl'Tor'Jlk^^^^^^ U/tide; tlie';^^s'/. [Archaic] The '"^rtevLZ'p^iealFXTA^tp. 13. [o. J. co, -84.1 , out; external; not inner; as, the ow^-world. 2, Farther extreme boundaries of a region. .,,. ,, .,K -1 - * V. 1 . T. out'breaK er, ant brek gr, re. breaker at a distance A (,„,„ „ (.enter or from something regarded as the inside; out-grnin't, rt. To excel in depth of color; outblush. fronitheBliore. «•''''"""!"'"• ?''"*'"^' .,..,.. „ .,,.,• as, the a«('«r row of seats; the ffw^fr border. [< AS. .5"''*'"""J'''' "-v.*^''"",'"'' '>'"'?.'",? aut'brek ing. re. act of one's residence or the main ground. 11.] out'breaK"lng, The breaking tlterra compar of at out! from from out, or that which bursts forth; an outbreak. »"*•«'""''• ai't-grO', rt. l.To surpass in growth; out'er' re In rifle-iiractise- rtl The nart of a tjiriret out- ont-breast't. vt. To surpass In strength of chfflt or In ,,,„' grow more rapidly than; become taller or greater in bulk "lV. "iU" Vai i S thst itrikenbiK narr J^^J^l?^^^^-^ ouster; oiSV^;^; oiit-breth', ... TO put out of breath; de- o^£^Jf ^SZt^J^. t!^ iJ^^ITroSlI ^r^^^^t^^ii prive of breath; exhaust: usually in the passive. out'er-ly. oufcrli, ailv. 1. [Rare.] Toward the outside. (rroii> a companionship, a coat, or a habit. Being all out.&reat/u-d in turns, they remitted from their toil. *.it. Entirely; utterly. OU'lre-lyt. OUt'groW'tll", aul'grOtll", re. That which grow-S out BBtKjKE Vua(i(|/ i, HE.VRY Fool o/ vol. ch. 6, p. 169. [D. * J. '60.] ou t'cr-inost", uut'er-mOst", a. On the extreme outside; of something else. Speciflcally: (1) An excrescence; in oufbreathe', oufbrtdh', r. I. t. 1. To breathe fartliest outward: superlative of oiyfer. out'er-estt. botany, an ap])endage or growth from the surface of a forth; emit. 2. To breathe out; cxjiire. out-faee', out-fes', rt. 1. To look out of countenance; plant, such as a trlchome, the corona of a petal, the lig-

II. i. To lie breathed out; issue, as the breath ; exhale; bear down by effrontery : face down; put a good face uie of a grass, etc. (2) Figuratively, a gradual hut nat- as, his life gently «/f«)-en./i«rf. on; face out; brave; confront boldly; defy. ural residt; a development from soine general condition. out-brlng', out-bring', ?V. To bring out; deliver; utter. But we'll oat/oce them, and outswear them too. Synonyms: see coNSEQrENCE. oul'sbrolh"«'rt, n. An out.pensioiier. Shakespeare Merchant of Pen fee act iv. sc. 2. otit'ji-uard", out'gflrd", re. An outlying guard or post. oul-bud't, rf. -fo put forth buds; sprout. Helooksasif He would oB(-/aee his dangers. OUt-gUSll', QUt-gUsh', rj. To gush out; issue with force. aut.blld',rt. fiui-e .l/itaa iii, l. OHt-buIld', 1 . To surpass in building. Massinoer o/ act sc. Insuchwise OutgusAed the Siren', deadly melodies. 2. lo exceed m durability of building. 2. [Bare.] To keep or force by boldness. Morris Ja.so» hk. xiv. st. M. out'bulld"lnK, aut'bild'ing. re. A smaller building out-fa'elns, outfe'sing, a. Brazen-faced; impudent, out'ausli", out'gush', re. A gushing out; ebullition. appurtenant to a main building and generally separate- ont'fall", out'fsl', re. [Prov. Eng] 1. The place where a out-bnul', out-hsr.M. 1. [Colloq.] !() surpass In hauling. it; river, culvert, or conduit discharges; mouth. falling Archaic.] To out. from an outhouse. 2. A 2. i haul out: dissension. sortie; sally. for out-burn', all^bOm',^». I. t. To exceed in burning, 3t. A out'haul". aut'hSl', re. Xavt. A rope extending autfang-thc'f. C. (autfangthef.^. /. W. etiiddingsail, as in force or duration. ""•II. f. To bum out;ut, beuc toocon- "'!.'/''''"'''A''.*if' the clew of a Ixiom-sail. tack of a lower ' H'r.) re. C/M A'Hff. i<(!c. A nrivllegewherebyalord wasen- Biinneu., head of a trysail on a uaff etc _,.,_._,, ,. _,. . ,^ abled to call any man dwell iig onhs manor, and taken for „"',"'V„.^«i_",,,,!,k^^^^ ,-„.,. , . ,„™ w '«'«^,' aut'hSi gr rope by ont-borBt't,i><.Tobur»tout. out-brast'tfout-brest't. felony in another place.to ansVrlnhlsowncourt; also, the ""''''a."' ». Ao»/^ 1. A out'burst", Qut'burst , re. A bursting out; a violent felon so tal

sofa, firm, ^k; at, ffire, 4(rd; elfm^nt, ^r = ov«r, £ight, § = nsage; tin, machine, | = r«new; obey, no; not, ner, atom; full, rflle; but, bum; alele; .

oulliee§ 1251 outrigger

o«t'hpe«t,M. Ontc^; alarm; outM. onl'heiiKt. oul'll''er, ant'lai'sr, n. 1. One whose residence is not out-point', aut-pelnt, cf. To sail closer to the wind than •ath'ert, a., pron.. & conj. other; either, in the same place where his office or business is situated, ou t-poise't, i'«. To outweigh. rt. pSrch-, n. vestibule. out'-Her'od, auf-her'ed To outdo, exaggerate, j. That which is without or beyond the main body; spe- out'porch;;, out A depicted by the old miracle-plays); aut'port n. port remote or overact (Herod a« ciBcallv in gcoloCT a portion ot a rock-mass that re- ""*P*"'*' , 1. A from the or, chief custom-house or seat of trade. hence, to surpass in cruelty wicki-dnws, or crime, mains "in position while originally conUguous portions respect; usually, to oul-JUrod lltrod. authorlt.v loosely, in any have been removed by denudation; opposed to iiilier. The of Bale's rauw and ot Lord Coke's concurrence What..ingnlar thing it i. that when the Frenchdotakelopiety 3. In fishing, a set-line. 4. [Rare.] One who is outside RS??,V;C^R'J;v,'^.'X'°J^vL;^*'T^; Bbou(,ham British tmwtitulwii ch. u, p. 221.iVfe"*^^[a. b. co. '61.7 tlw; o»(-H", aitTlm-,,.'^ilLrtMAn extremity or end part »• A place of export; a seaboard port. •t-hire't, rt. To lease or let out for compensation. of a body, as a llnBer. Our state is the 8rr»at outpnrt of the United States for Europe- n. smaller building stand- Benjamin- fssai/s, out'house", aut'hous', A out'llne", aut'lam'. r/. To draw the outline of ; hence, ">«. hish iVooresso/A^utod'on miVnn. w. •06.1 ing apart from, but appertaining to, a main or large build- to describe or state in general terms; sketch; delineal*-; P-^- It. * b. ingor dwelling; an outbuilding. as, to OM«i/i« a house; to outfine a proce

juinerp rr, iiui Kiuvr, n. oun. uiai-pmic uscu a J. H. SHORIHOCSK BiancAe ptT i, ch. 6, p. 117. [MACM. '«!.] OUt-pr In chain-snrveying U) kej'p tally. 3 in fishing, a set-line. out'put'', aut'puf, n. 1. The quantity put out or pro- see duced ready for distribution or sale in a specified time; SSi'iSirffri' "k-iniUMvi" " Synonymi: abkidomknt; cibcumfkbenck. onl-lln'e-ar, aut-lin'g-ar, «. Of the nature form- amount or rate of [iroductioii, collective or individual, •ut-liiiice''' rt t ri To cause to extend outward- pro of or as of coal, Ject like a lance oiii-lnunce'^.— oui'lBDced^t. «. ing an outline. ore, or metal from a mine or the mines of a par- ProjecUng like a lame. aal'laiinred''t. oat'listt, ji. The edge of the border; selvage. ticular region, or of iron from a furnace or a country. Ont'land, uut'laod. 7). I. Land lying beyond the limits 0«"-Jlv', W. Olltlive. Phil. Soc. They were ahle for some time to prevent the price of coal from of (X'Cupalinn or cultivation. 2. Feudal Law. Land OUt-Hve', out-llv', v. I. <. 1. To live beyond or itoingdown by strictly limitinit the supply, or, as it is called, the ' »' •»,<'' "«> per week o. Fawcett Futit- bevond the demain lands of a manor, let out to tenants, longer than ; continue to exist after; survive. 2. To last .'"''-J?"' Miujcknt longer than; ouOaat. '<"^ Ecmomu/or Beamner, S 3, ch. 2, p. 119. [MACM. '89.] 1 < AH nil.iml. < at. ont, -f larul. laml ) • at'laild-rr'. n. A fcm-lKmr. oat-lRnd'iah-ert, t>" «e weary ouiw^lvea with apeciiUtiana whether human loves 2. Pkystol. That which is egested from the Ijody by the auI-laiid'lHli, out lamrish, a. I. Of barbarous, un- can oudii* the ahock of death I lungs, skin, or kidneys; the egesta other than the feces; tuiABEra Phelps Oa/e« oh. is, an. [o. co. '69.] couth, and unfamiliar aspect oraction; out of the way; 8. ^ar p. * opposed to Income. 3. JClec. The electric poHer of a 8trari<; bizarre; as, an OHtfandlM style or penMm. ' II. i. To have a longer life than another. dynamo. electric machine: usually expressed in watts. Asm^^^^^ Whenever,erH|So«he,'.im«eryii.n„iouH»nd;M.iti.triteand?5;;,''5'^/,';;''-H [Soother's .""^'in^r'tern. cli,rc^^6rt^z, n. j/. Quarters situated """ "" universitiesuniversities, a tatne..•u.e. CuiK ea«ra(. and ^hb. vol. ii, p. 501. l». '«».] "?,Vi!5?J',..,Sft„?h„ i?,1iI.™'~„,,iH. ^ away from headquarters. 2. Situated in «. unfamiliar spot; r^-mote; now usually „;,1SSf„"wTaSMu\™"rT°T,? disconcert by bold de- Z\ii','»j:"^r:,l,i;,,:-'° '\'^^^^ , , m a derogatory sense; as, an o„llm„tu.h place. 3. [Ar- meaner; stare ont of countenance. 2. To surpass in "'," halc] To coini it Sr^ec umn* tr^at wTtrvtoleSce and . FVireign in origin; not indigenous or native; now looking or seeing. 3+. To look out; select. "^ wron^ °n]'."'"'\fe by"> roign,roueliT^deruue tn-atmentiriaimeni 01of a^wany kind-Kinu, inplylng uncouthness or liarharitv. oul-land't. oul'look",uuiiuK,n.aul"luk" n I Thelie extent of wnaiwhat ISis seena«-nbv ", K' " «ui looK 1. 1 01 oy abuse heinous speciflcay, X.,1 , 1. I 1 1 v; to commit rape or ndecent t>ul((m««•"'~aa,„it uponi,nnn (a(« woman).wnmnn> 2.>> i,,In general,m,,,o~l to•Jr,.«i,,V,,itcommit any,,i,» KB. TYLOitM>lilro|>o<0|;Vcli. <. P.1U. (l.t>.l ,n onMiincr or w iiulnw hnncen™**. ""ethe pr<»entnr««.nl' conQllloncondilinn or . - ' gross trespass npon or against; brazen y or shamefuy f^ *>< iill.,.M., ^ ailima- seeoiTLAKD.].tJZ-^^yin\ futnre. . Ef^lI!?J!Lprospect of. Uiings; as^a wide «/««)*,• an encoura- ' fnfringe; 'grn-'-ly violaU' the rights of; is, conduct that Bynonyma.Synonymi^^tciS??seeHiBTic. ging(n/tt»«. Distance view; hence, foresight. 2. of 3. <'"''«!/«»o,,/,.«i7«« a"all r<-cei\ednr/ivwl opinion.nnininn -oul-land'lah-Ir. adv. out-Iand'Uh- th* an of lookincoutoriookhi^, out or beiuKonueing on theuie waitnwatch- vieilanceiignance. llke>.-oul-land'Ull-n«H. n. „ The worst prison, are not of stone; they are ot throbbing hearts, Some natures grow cynlcj and pesumistic fa their outloot on OKfraeecJ by life. nul.iii.h'* ri Tu trlke or luih onV an infamous ° """""' ^- «"'"'' ^(^' ^*»"''*" P- '- ruVla.'i.'', Qut^rh"'"! Al^ktog forth; «, outburst. •», 7' «- » * ™- "'-l "d'^.^. U. H<^»etic H^e. Sept., p. 2»7. , r*,.. «««'«•»'«» —*«» •*<-«*• -a tb. d»n. b«.k«»d 4. A place or station where watch Is kept, or from which J^•trote of ?iJY'VT„ltT. <. I o act outrageously„'^,,™ZS,,slv T^ilt?t>e guUty OfoToOutrage..fi^T^S^r^ repmuwe. •trtowlahnd om n hill or u»/-h.t/>u'er K Tho « .iici. • 1< acoBoi vol. I, eh. ™?,' EuoT txinM Dmmda 4. p. o. [H. '^^.^ " * - outrager, < mitraije; see outragb, «.] «n^*d;«nuy^6^tatIZ^^. a i-S-* whichiKJh lie.ill beforeLr™ one™« iniX ^^hsight oa.-la.I'.Qut-lgst-.rf. To last longer than; survive. „„,««!. r^ ^^^ oul'raijc, «. An act of shocking violence/ or cruelty; onl-laUKh'. out laf. rt. 1 . To It! laughing; " . 1. wrpw ,^^^ £fT "l ^ ™ _ „ ,. .a. , , " '"' Vrovevty a gross lauirh more effect than. "^ c" *" ; with 2. [RafeT To diBS)mft, "'°'^,o°„u.*S ou'lo"*.. outlook, toward f J^'*" ""' PT"" c^^pU.^' ' i^lo^X^^'olfSSS'tS'-arf"^ infringement of morality'"''V also, confuse, or discourag.- by laughing; laugti out. uinuiJjrihTp iUlV or decency ; a gross in- «'"• [Itare.] lolent rage; a dangerous display of out'la w", out'lS-. rt. I . To put out of the protection Carlvle Frerfertc* vol. 1. bk. U, ch. II, p. m. [H.] 2. \ temper; frenzy. and deprive of the benefit of the law; proscribe; aa, to •I'Uak'er, aufluk-cri »- [Rare.] One who looks outer 3t. Extravagant or eccentric conduct; nence, outlaw a felon. 2. To deny the akl of the law for the off; heoMu a pemon lacking concentration or constancy. excess; luxury. [F., < outre, beyond, < L. ultra, enforcement of (rightsi; deprive of lesal force. •I'l»««e*t. w. The act or condition of being looaed; eva- beyond.] Hon; escape. nnt'lAiv" n 1 One who hv Uwalnsw*^ haa hAMi Synonyms: abuse, affront. Indecency. Indignity, Injury, * "innlngoff; excursion.- OB t'la'peF, B. Insult, offense, violence. An oulraae cmiihlnes InniU and putn,!i out,ir,tV.f'ihAof the protectionJni^of^n and.nH deprived/»,l^ll'Vrfiffof tbe benefitlSI?Ji??3""«''»»«'^<"-of out'iy^ng, ouflai-ing, a. 1 . Situated apart with re- iniury. See injury. Compare synonyms for affront. the lav» in every respect; a person who by reawn of g,^ to the manifest central part or main body; ontalde aafrBBe-lyt, adt,. Superfluously. crime has forfeited *^1 civil right, and to a»UWdMd. Sf the geaeral «;henie or snbj«t; distant; extHnslc. 2. -ODj'ra«e.ne«H+,«. Extravagance 2. ^.I«wl«». dlwrderijr na»n; «,b*t)l outHra'Keouii, out r^'jus. a. I Of the natiire of an '•"'"J"^". OoKidltS; boundary; over the fronUer; alien. . «.p(*mlly one "hoopenlj ^«e. the tow, a. Iwndlt. <^l""-acter; heinous; atrocious • out-man', aa^m«^^ r«. 1. To outnumber in point of 2. Ani/. Z.air. person oaUawed °^^S^-Ueedlcss of''««^».V'authority'P, 3. A bjr pcoccM. [< AS. „pn. 2. To excel In manly doing. or decency; shocking in conduct. a//aou, i2/. out, 4- toTt/, law < J^ onl-man'lle, uut-inan'tl, r(. IRare.I To excel In dress or I do wish ... that that ou(rni7eou» boy were gone. ont'IaM-''ry,aut lA'ri. ft. 1 . The atate of being put out adonuni-nt. Mas. Molbsworth T-Ae /ecd Gran(;e ch. 6, p. 64. [t. w. *9i.] of the protection and deprived of the benellt ofthe Uw. oul-matcli', aut-mach' rt. To prove superior to. 3t. Exceetiing bounds; immoderate; enormous; extrav- Eilwsrd ri. Bet their lefassl by a («ier*l oatKurrrct tke wbfle •al-nale', out-in*l'. TO outmatch; surpass. agant. [ < F. oulrageux, < outraqe; see OUTRAGE, n.l order tot dercyl. neKiii.'s enorta wn« doaad. and all JDale* oul'moat", Qut'mOsf, a. Outermost. Synonyms: sec bad; rLAORANT- INFAMOUS. [""''••I To mount above. '^^'r..™«;LjrMS» i£» !£j;S,k A sii - M« t- ^1 •^•"•Vi,°"''".''5''.'.\.'''- - out-ra'Keous-ly, a(ft:. - out- ra'geous- GaEi!(«*iir(tf(a/.Ai«.n»p('«>• ^hc quality or condition of Iiy which a person Is put in that condition, or "»*,"«•"; »•, »• „n»,r„„ee', n-trflhs', i: (autrons, C.i;^0-tren8'. C.J), n. separatenee., •peciacally from the per- The utmost extremity; the bitter end. lition itself. In England, anciently. miUaipm ^} IF.) OeivingF ""f'"!^:mind; externality. «.eni» lo have •Ignlfled the deprivation of all legal prote& His courtiers declared that he already meHled the lady, by thus tlon, bfltb of person and property, out later It omy disabled Bat for the eonfldence which we place In the asaertiona of oor vindicating her fame and fortune in a deadly eomtiat to oiitranre. the ootlawfrom holding pn)pertyand bringInK suit, though reaaon and ooaacieBoa, wo ooold have no certainly of the reality Irving Wotferl'it HimhiI, Hidotr's ttnleiil p. 1-JH. |o. F. p. '63.] artual of world. hi .tiilmlghtbesued,and It to nowahollshed In dvllpro- and o»«iiMa the material — A ootrnnce, to the bitter end: said of a comhat. '^ CoutKlKoa Wortts, toK Sermon to vol. l.p. 430. note. [h. 'M.] and little used In criminal. In the United Mates „„,.r„„Be', auir#nj', i-(. To range ahead of; sail by. -.nown In ctrll caaea, and baa rarely been naed In 2. The quality of being Intcreated in external things. out-riiught't, itttp. &vp. of outreach, r. Outreached. Oiltivat. obaerration. energy, handlciaft, ingentUty, otifaoM «"'-rny''t, r. I. (. To go lieyond; surpass. II. 1 To .\n .ullaiery in Ireaaon or felony araonnts to a conviction and in boys, so aa to give them a pursuit as well aa a study. exceed bounds; be extravagant iir crazy, out-rnie't, attainder of the offeroe charged in the indictment. John Brown .Slxirr Ilouri first series, p. SIO. (T. a r. '62.1 OUt-ray"t, Hi. To radiate forth; 8|iread out. Btac«sTo«c>>iiime»»or(nrbk. r/. Tooulrage. Iv.ch.«4, p.SI». ,, t„f A nrolecling or oullvlng comer out'ray't, out'rnyet. ...I«v'.,aut-l«;r;. ("tan^.l To lay out In view- ,„«««. JVt^Snm'lJer. ouHm'^^^^^^^^ "" ^'»"^«! shall the lost, the bouse The «.ved vaatlv . . . Zlnuml-er and eSuona^ulig-e';-.; fai flon;''s 'rlk Jgy Si, "eir^avSTu™" h,V,J?^hAtbrace, that whichw°h ch^.^li.huril'-'ix.S.nd'itnri'is disbursetl. expi-ndltiire^ „,Ood be filw. Taylor ParabU.uf o„r iiario„r shjh * M. oiH-reacU'Taut rich', r. 1. (. I. To reach or go bc- I'-;'-'*-,' •'"'P-'f- >""J- [Archalc.J To overreach; cheat. II. I To rich°Ji;d™i!id«"E'iS3S'iSl.SC'^^°**"*''™'° ,„ . ^, ^,, . 2. ''"'^ "<=' "' '''"=^- T:'T"KiSo'irf?S!!r:/K:^ch. », ,. «. t.. t. co.i r' « int optn 8lr. ^e^KCc "mZo.?;oiiTDOOB.—-"ouiuf^orloo';;'^lonooora , "%h^n. I nt 7'*;'"r <'«»"-*'"r»'"' 1* \n iiiitlvini/n-trMt "SiVX^r r^"ingout; extent of reaching out. world .iiitslde theopcn air. of the housi-; "'Itdoobs. ou'^re-eui"dniiee't, ». Excessive pride or arrogance. SvnonvmV -.•^/^aisE •"'"f=r""h''ioued+, «. Antl.unted; old-fashioned..J"' i, oHI-rede't, r(. To surpass In counseling. outout'lI-?.n"^?iI II IrVII, ^lliif.lI.. iKare \ springinganrinirinir out,nnt- ewape.eaeu^ Dim . I A onl'««r-lli<"« ay", aut'-ev-dhi-«e', o. 1. Remote- „,,/,,. ,..|..t.,(.(r riierlv i..rn uul-learii . .ml . rt. To sur|>as« in learning. 1. j^. ,i„„„„i; jifluult to reach; seclude.1; as, an out-of- ou"ire-iiirr'. h-trmiir:',!. IF.] 1. The region beyond WhowiUcome. Uod wUlmg. looK/lenm the Blthy friar. Mc-wny 8|iot. 2. Different from what is common; out tliesia. 2+. I'ltramarineblue. TiNNY8..».s/rjo»i«OKl«u««s«.». of the common range; unusual; eccentric; singular. out'rlck, oufrlc. n. IKng.] A rick standing In the open, To get beyond the instruction of. ai.t-rdid' »- I. ride faster than; ¥ t. 3t To become hu doth™ had an oi,/-o/-(»,.„v.p foreign cut about them. out-rtdc' I. To Inforriii-cl from others; search out for onewlf. Euzabith (.'. uaskkll CranfoM ch. 16, p. an. (h. '»?.] overtake in riding; ride by or away from. oul'jer. nr l.-r. .1. [Scol.l I'llhoUM-d: said of cattle. ont'«OV''en, OUl'-uVn. n. A domestic oven built out- Pallid Death ... presently pounced upon ... George I., In his olll'ler», ut l..ri. IScot. n. 1 Cattle not housed. ,,f^lo,>™ travelling chariot, on Ihc Hanover rood. V^'hat postilion can ouf- oal-iel''. rr To omit; send lorth. ...• rMc thatnale horseman I .«._,'_/ n.- „j. ia^„t t t Outn,., of;^t at.>..ii.>.n»„a distance. „. 1. Thackeray ^'our Ofor»e /. 34. |e.*l.'»1.] out'Iel". .iiitl.f, 1. A passage or vent tor ixcarK "V '^\'^X't ^at''\l>vrj^ On.rB«, p. or dimli.irL" II iiM-iiiis : of egrew; an exit; as. the oi/He/ ride ride car- ^m^.p^p,,/, oiit-pfs, r! l.(."|Rare.) To leave behind, as H- * 1 . To abroad. 2. To beside a

' "' ' 'illcally. in commerce, a vent or market In running, walking, or sailing; surpass In rapidity of pace; riairo iis iin attendant. '' any commodity. 2. In electric lighting, outstrip. 11+./. Topassout. «ul'ridi'"+. «. 1, Theactof ridlngout; a place forriding; It iiiiient in an ineandescent-lampfixture. 3. oul-por'«-inoHr+, r<. To have more paramours than. an excursion. 2- An expedition; furay. - '< out iwr'lsb.ii. parish sltuatctl Inthecoun- , oni'p«r"l!,. Z™","'" bailiff rw-lvl!*. rhrnnifh which the fdiis pMiw« at dpllvcry. omi-im-Vi-'* rt Tn excel- BiirpHM *+• *^*^ who ridcp ii"M'lon-er. atii'-pen'shiin-cr. n. A non-re»l<|pnt employed to ride throughout the county or hundred to (fn-atpr effect Omn. p«-n«lotier, aunt ahnspital: as,a SnuK llMhitr out-pftiMiotifr. euuimon men to the court. 4+. A highwayman. OHl-lle'^, ri. To lie in the open: camp ont, or lie nnder ont'*play^er, aut'-ple'vr, n. In the game of rackets, oiil'rlis"^or.aut'rig'yr, /*. 1. A part built or arranged eanvaf; tut, a regiment mtflyinff at Kicnmnnd. the one who receives the service. Compare in-player. to project beyond a natural outline, as of a vessel or ma-

aa » ovt; •!]; Ifl -^ f«ud, 19 = fatuTe; e»k; charch; dh = tAe; so, sins, i^k; so; thin; jdi — azure; F. boA, dttne. <,from; i^ oluoleie; (• vof^n^- .

oiilrl^rlil 1!253 oval

chine, for support, attachment, etc, 2. Boating. (1) A yond a bounding line or surface; outer region; exterior: out-sum', ant-sum, r/. [Rare.] To outnumber. bracket, usually of irwn, provided with u rowlock, pro- opposed to itmde out-Mweat't, vt. To sweat for; labor hard for; earn. out-8*veep', aut-swip', r(. [Poet.] To sweep out. jecting from the side of a narrow rowboat or ^liell, so as \AA . I, -.1.1 *», ...„ii „i.i«K „.,„i~, *».« ™^. „ t= To excel insicetnese. to bring the t>ar into position for an effective stroke. (2) ai.d»s?mlledt rntwr^iw^hif^^^^^^^^ " "''„»-?«'«'"'+' '•'• To 8urp»88 lu swelling. To over- w. "54^™ i. c. D. -ss.! 1- 2. A projecting ct>ntrivance terminating in a boat-like float, i? BKECHF.S'«a M^^^ p. u. U. braced to the side 4. The utmost limit; the fullcet or highest degree or out-xyl'la-blet, »;<. To contain more syllables than. of a canoe or other . K.xcepted; excejjtlng; save. out"s|aue't.— out''- ive against cap- outside passenger, riding on tlie top of a coach or the ta'kiiiK-lyt. adv. Exceptionally, aut-tel', sizing: especially like. 6. In fencing, the part that is to tlie right of the out-tell', vl. To count beyond; overrecljon. external or superflcial; outward used the i&- line'of defense. 7. }v. Outer or soiled sheets of a ream by "manner "a'hollow^ffij''^ or package of laDders of the In- pai)er out-ihrow'+,r/. To throw beyond; cast out. dian and pHcitlc out-side% aut-said', C. (aut'said, ^^,\aav. On or to onfiontfue', auftong', vt. [Rare.] To talk louder A Polynesian Proa with Outrigger, than, oceans. (3> A spar the outside; beyond the border or surface; on the exte- out'Mop^ iiuftep', vt. [liare.] To oveitop; excel. for extending a sail or rope farther than the beam of the rior; without; specifically, in the sea beyond harbor. oiit'tiirii", aut'tum", n. The quantity of goods turned vessel would otherwise permit. (4) A l)oom swung out The Rtilliiess of death reigned outside. out or j)roduced; output. from an anchored vessel, to which to secure boats. (5) A EnwAKD King Great South ch. 20, p. 206. [am. p. co. '75.1 oul-twinc't, vt. To extricate; disentangle. spar projecting from a boat's stem, to aid in hauling out — outside of. 1. Same as ovtsidk, prep. 3. [Col- out-u'«"ret, r(. To exceed In usury, loq.l of; beeides; as, out-val'ue, aut-varyfi, rt. To exceed in value, a clew. tt>) A cathead. 3. Mech. (1) A wheel or i)ulley Kxduslve outtide of his secretary, no one knew his views.— [Slang S.] outside a frame, for transmitthig power. (2) The jib of to sret o. of. U. 1, To The nation oufm/Hcs all its authors. E. P. Whipple First Cen- "lister or understand. "2. To eat or drink; devour. a crant.crane (Si AA beiiml^am nroicrtiim ffnni n wnll nnd hrtvino- tury of the Republic ch. 12. p. 349. [h. 76.] (3) P"'^*;'^ "B fi^o o"«-»lde', j>rep. On or to the exterior of; bevond a hoisting-tackleckie at ItsIt* oultrouter tnd.end. fa?(4) Aa CarkotVikfbrackct-Uke the^u,.Vie' aul-vai' vt To vanquish in competition; out- (4) li^itof; forth; from; out of; without: elliptical for frame for sus[>ending an arc-lamp, as from a wall, so <>«^*'"'.Vxcel•"urpaU side of: as, footsteps outside the room. that it will stand out from the surface. 4. A light ra- out-Vil'laiiit, vt. To surpass In villainy. There is somethingr in our souls of God, which corresponds with ciug-boat equipped with projecting rowlocks. See def. out-VOte', OUt-vOt', vt. To cast more votes than. IS of G«jd ou(s(rf« us. what aut-wf-k', p(. remain 2 (1). 5. A horse hitched outride ,_, out-wake', To awake longer than. of the shafts or traces, HOBERTSONRnRR«T«nv.sP,^..„„««.r.nd.....,es.8er.xix.p.4i2.SejiHOns second t> [H. '-0.] Qufwel', «. [Scot.] Refuse. as alongside of a team. out'wale< 1. -A An out- out'Hi n m w. . * j out'ward, -WQrdz, adv. 1, To or the out-Bl!de^a^^slaid',n.„„,-„. ...^ , ^m^o.^iu (Rare.J To slide out or forward. <>„j.^„rd8, f direction of the outside; from the in- out'room", aut'rum', n. An outer room; outlying «ut-Hlinif't, ?'«. To silng out or forth; scatter. terior toward apartment or oftlce. out-Mliu', aut-sllp', vi. To slip out. or into the exterior; away from an inner out-rooi', Qut-rQt', cf. 1. To surpass In rooting. 2. [Ar- out'ssole", aut'-siir, 7i. The outside or lower sole of a boot point or place; as, the oak's branches spread outward. chalc] Tu root out; eradicate. orshoe: distinguished from m»Hole. Yet. while he deems thee hound. out'robet, n. Sale by auction; vendue, out'ropt. out-span', aut-span', H'. (aut'span, C), v. [S. Afr.] The links are shivered, and the pnson-walls *" .... '^ . opt'ro*'per, aut'rO'p^r. 7i. Formerly, tlie - , in City of Lon- 1. 1. To unyoke or unhitch from a vehicle, as oxen; un- Fall outward. Bryant Antiquity of Freedom st. 8. don, an nfflcer charged with the duty of seizing the goods hitch the animals from, as a wagon; also, to unsaddle. As the earth's crust is warmer and warmer as we go farther of foreigners when sold elsewhere than in the public mar- and farther down, there must be a steady flow of heat outwards kets. H. i. To unharness or unyoke animals; detach draft- for'ei|fnaa"ker}. from the interior to the surface. P. (i. TAIT Recent Advances in out-roy'al, uut-roral, vt. animals from a vehicle. [Bare.] To excel In royalty or Physical Science lect. vii, p. 166. [macm. '76.J kingly stale, A beautiful flower dug out bv the roots, at a place where thev had 'ou/.SiKtnnerf.' 2. On the surface; piiporftcially. 3. Away from port or out-run', aut-rou',t\ I. ^. 1. Torunl)eyond; exceed; Olive Schkeiner Story of an African Farm /?/- i, '88.] home. [< AS. t, let Kiver. lon or ceusor.— out'«po"ken-ne«», w. out-welF, aut-wel', w^ & W. To pour or well out. ... . s.o.DRAKK/Mdfati«o/.\.vim.bk.v,ch.i,p.i3. [ant. ins. '37.] oiit-Npread', aut-spred', vt. & vi. To spread out; ex- out' wick", aut'wic', n. In curlii>g, a stroke in which out-»ell', aut-sel', ^'^. 1. To sell quicker or for a bet- tend: generally in the past participle; as, o«^^r€«(/ arms, the played stone strikes the outer edge of another, knock- ter price than; also, to surpass in selling goods. 2t, To out'wpread", aut'spred", 71. Extension; propagation, ing it toward the tee. Compare inwick. exceed the value of. out-Kpred', v. & n. Outspread. Phil. Soc. out-win't, vt. To get out of. oui-Hen''"S «« i" ***ght. 2. Mil. To outflank, ginning; start; opening. out'i*et"tlngt. Henry Vlli. commenwd. oiit-wlt', uut-wit', rt. [out-wit'ted; out-wit'tino.]

A good outset is half the voyage. Froude Catliarine of Aragon intro., p. 12. [8. '91.] 1 . T'o excel in a contest of wits; defeat by greater cun- iBviNG Bmce6Wdffeflo/(p. 16. [G. p. p. '61.] out'Hpurt", aut'spOrf, ». [Rare.] An outward spurt. ning or ingenuity; overreach; cheat; as, to outu4t a Synonyms: see beginnino. out-stand', aut-stimd', ??. I. ^. 1. [Rare.] To stand burglar. 2+. To surpass in wit or understanding. out'i4et''ier, nut'seivr. n. [Prov. Eng.l An emigrant. out against; withstand. 2t. To stay bt^yond; outstay. Synonyms: see cheat; deceive. oui'Md'aintf, Qui'set Ing, rt. Setting off shore or outward. II. i. 1. To stand out; project. 2. To stand over- re- out'witt, «. The perceptive faculty; empirical knowledge. [Rare.] settler in *"f.'.,l^V'M?ri*"i!:*i**''Sr.n- A the out- main unpaid, unsettled, untouched, or the like, o"t'"«H»' a"*'^''dh. I, prep. [Scot.] Outside; without. skirts or on the frontier. 3. To _ stjind awftv frnni fhp IniiH «« a vtisuf-l lit. adv. Without: outwardly. out-fthlne', aut-shain', v. I. /... To__ shine„ brighter^..^ ^.^.^"^-l^i^^A'^?,'^"^^^^^^ o,.„ „ ,. out-wom'an. uut-wum'an, ol [Rare.] To surpass In «"*"»**»"« «»t-sfand'ing, a 1. Still standing,, than: hence, to surpass in a brillianti«ntnii«litvquality, asn« in wit.wit *»?^' womanliness. as a debt unpaid or not due; undischarged or unresolved, II. i. To shine out; emit light. out-work', aut-wCrk', vt. 1 . To work faster or better 2. Standing prominently forth; salient. out-Mboot^ Qut-shDt', vt. 1. To excel in shooting or than; outdo. 2t. To surpass in workmanship. 3t. To The ou(«/andinff fact of history, that, in the sphere of human ex- markfimanship. 2. To shoot beyond ; overshoot. work Out* complete ^""""^ """^^ oui'Hhot", out'shef.n. 1, [Prov. Eng.& Scot.] A projec- Jf^^of it^i^ XS'fScSf Qut'wurk", n. 1. Fori. Any defensive Oon.aslnHbulldlng. -£* pi. [Eng.] In paper-making, white constructed outside the enceinte,_ in or beyond the C. HODGE Systefnatic Theology vol. i, pt. i, ch. s. 283. [s. '72.] ^'.?'*|^ ratfs of the second grade. p. out-stdrt' ditch of afort, asacaponiere hornw-ork or lunette. 2. oui-Mhow't, rt. To show openly. ont-Htart', r/. [Poet.] To start or spring out. [Rare.] An outer part; shell. [Archaic] An outer out'«tart", aut'stdrt , «. [Rare.] starting out; 3. oul-MhuiVuut-shut' vt. To exclude; shutout. A outset. out-Htrain', uutstren', vt. 1. To overstrain. 2+. To defense; bulwark. 4. [Scot.] Outdoor work. out'»lde^, aut'said", C'.i E. I. A'. W. Wr. (out-said', C"), stretchout. 3t. To surpass In exertion, out-strein't, out'work"er, aut'wurk'cr, n. One who works out- 1 Of oriMTtjiinino'f^ih..rttit«i,i^.-«it\Tat;-ro7A;ri„"l**-'^"""8 the outside, situated at or be- : out-Htraught't, pp. of orTSTRETCii. r. jwidZ^^aIiTthe outersurfaceor^ «i,io or tjikes nw*ftv work to do at home bounds; exterior; as an outMde oul-Ntrech', -streelit'. Outstretch, etc. Phil. Soc. "">-"oiil-w < T* ^r^^'resMiw y mSn"'--^iV'^'^- «eat on a coach. 2. RestrictedRewtrirtcd totn ttieth*- outside;rmtaiH*.- ..vtrun/.. »..»/»r..««•// r,„f^t^ff ,. A «t™..» «,.™^i,. ,p-..™.i *.._ "; i^* "'S*'.".**''^' . --1 extrane-oui'street"^- " , aut'strtt%7i. street remote from the center, ^ , A out-wrinir't. vt _vTo wrimrm k f11rofiim wlttiin-luiin, shed.suea. *-"'•' "" "'."Kt,? . > ous; Buperflcial; apparent onJy. 3. Reaching the limit; oul-Htret

«ofa, firm, 9ak; at, fftre, ^^ccord; elgmgnt, gr = over, eight, § = usage; tin, machine, | = renew; obey, no; not, nor, atom; full, rule; but, born; aisle; :; 1 J

oval 1253 overbear

eqnal compression on cither side. 3t. Of or pertaining 2. A furnace. [< AS. ofen, oven.] the top or edge of or submerge; ae, the water is ovei' he&d. lo an egg. F. oraklng or roasting.— I>utch o. pression tnore than is generally preferable. Here — o^val-es'cent, a. Approximately oval.~o'- 1 , A t«king-|>ot. heated by surrounding it with coals. See 10. lllus. and there upon; traversing the surface of; throughout val-l-form", C. (o-val'l'torm, E. W. W'r.), a. under skillet. ^Z, A sheetMnetal oven, used in front of a grate and roasting by radiated the extent of; touching, affecting, or noting ShaiKxl like an egg; ovoid or oval. — o'val-ly* adv. — and rertected heat. 3, many points A brick oven.— Etfyptiau o,. a large earthPn vessel sunk of throughout; as, to wander globe; o'val-nPHS, «.— o'val-old, a. Tending to oval. over the the mud was in the ground: used like a brick oven.— ov't'ii.-biiilil"er, splashed o'valJ*, a. Used lu an ovation; triumphal. w«7' the garment; he glanced (xver the manu- H. LEng.] The long-talled titmouse.- o.*tit, u. LEng.] script. 1 1 . With continued consideration of or concern o'val. O'val, n. 1. A figure or body resembling the lon- The wlllow-warbler.- o.iwooil, n. Wood specially suit- about; as, to watch in illness; gitudinal section of an ordinary egg; a closed curve. able. In kind and size, for a bakers' oven, as basswood cut werone to grieve over the Cf^mvex throughout, and of greater curvature at each end to four-foot lengths. past. 12. Pending the enjoyment or participation than at the middle part; the shape or contour of an egg. ov'en'blrd", uv'n-bgrd' n. A bird that builds adorned of; as, the contract was settled over a bottle. 13. Dur- ' .- ing the entire 2. An elliptical-.'.-athletic field; also, one ou which an nest. Specifically: (1) A South- American furnariinetr«c- continuance of ; throughout the time of; as, ice elliptical racing-track is laid out. creeper whoee nests are oven-shaped structures of clay. the kept over summer. 14. Her. Resting upon — bicircular oval* a real branch of a biclrcular quar- especially Fumariits rufa. An American warbler, and partly forming a covering of: distinguishetf from tic— i'aricHian o.« see Cartesian.— Cassinian o.. the golden-crowned thrush alx>ve^ which signifies higher on the escutcneon without same as Cassinian.— conjasale o.* an oval that forms (Seiurug auricajnllus), ol- overiapping. [< AS. ofer.\ part of a complete algebraic cuire. ive-green above and white Over IS an clement In a large number of self-explalning o-Tal'bu-niin, o-val'biu-mln, n. £gg«albamin. compounds, as In [< below, with dusky streaks the following list, with the general mean- OVUM -|- ALBfMIN.] ing of too.' 'too much.' 'too great,' 'too long,' etc. (with on the brea.*t and sides. o'vanit, a. Triumphing In an ovation. (3) the necessarj- change of fonn for the part of speech in- [Eng.] (a) fl-va'ri-a* o-v€'ri-Q or -vg'ri-a, «. Plural of oVARirM. Theoveu-tit. (6) volved); as, occ^-anxiety, too great an.xlety; oc^-act, to act o-va^rt-al'8:l-a, o-veTor -vg']ri-al'ji-a, n. Pain in the The oven-builder, unduly or to excess; orerbounteous, giving too freely; over- , anxious, ovaries; ovarian neuralgia. [< ovarium 4- Or. alam, O'Ven cny-nia, o-ven ki- extremely or excessively anxious; oi'treageiness, ma^ n. the state or condition of being too eager. pain.) o'^var-argl-a:.— o-Ta''rI-al'eic, a. J3o^. Tissue cop- overabound overfeed overliberal e-va'rl-an. o-ve'ri-an, a. Of, pertAining to, or affect- sistmg of oval cells: not in overreadlness overagltate overflerce overllberally overready itig the ovary; as, an "**• t"^ oval', o., -f- kn- ovarian tumor; an ovarian tube. overanxiety overfill overloglcal overreflne [< L. ovum, egg.] o-va'ii-al^. chtma.J ^ . ^ overanxious overflue overlong, n. & overreflne- ""*' o- va'ri-ole. o-ve'ri-ol. n. Zool. A diminotive ovary; ^^' "' overanxiously overflneness «rfp. ment "liJSv overbairen one of the tubular glands of a composite ovary. #»/»«/' A'vpr ./ T^ inm.^ overfond overloud overrich '^ overbooklsh overfondly overlove o-va^ri-ot'o-my, o-ve-ri-et'o-mr**. .Surg. The re- , overrigged o^.^^'vaul?* dL overbounte- moval of the ovary by excision, requiring incision overfondness overlusclous overrlghteous o'ver.'a, Out^r; sup^erior: not ou8 overforward through the abdominal overlusty overrigld walls, detachment of adhesions, properly an adJectlVv^. overbreed overforward- ovemiagnlfy- " overrigorous etc. [< OVABITM -TOMY.^ An Oven-t>ird + va'rl-o-tome, n. o'ver, n. 1. The part of overbright ness overman, v. overripe ( Fnrnnriun An iiiF«tniment for cutting out an ovarian tumor.— o-tm. the \ overburden- overfree overmarch game of cricket during ru/n) (t/4) overripen rl-ol'o-miMt, n. A surgeon skilled in ovariotomy. which one bowler retains I some overfreely overmeddle overroast and Its Nest. overbusy o-va'ri-ouM, o-vf 'ri-os, a. [Rare.! Consisting of ^gs. uninterrupted possession of overfreight, r overmellow oversaturato ©"va-rl'tlN, O'va-rai'tis or -rl'tis, n. Pathol. Inflam- overcareful overfrcquent o vermodest o v e r s c r u p u - his wicket : in England, the time occupied in bowling five mati'in of iheovarv. overcautious overfruftful overmodestly lous balls; in the United States, usually six. When the imipire overcautlously overfull overmoist overscrupu- o-va'rl-um, o-v^'ri-um or -vg'ri-ura, [-ri-a, pl.\ n. calls "over!" the bowling is taken up at the opposite wicket, overcautious- overfulness overuioisture lousness Same as ovary. and the field Is changed to suit the alteration in bowling. ness overgarrlson, overneat overseason, r. «'va-ryt, «. Of or pertaining to an ovation. 2. [U. a.] An overplus unaccounted for; excess of cash overcloy overnumer- oversllght o'va-rjr, O'vu-ri. n. Fries, pt.] 1 . The organ or gland remaining after balancing accounts. overcolor overgird OU8 overslow, a. of the female that gives rise to — naiden over* an over In cricket that Is unproduc* overcostly overglad overofflclous oversoon the ova or essential pnKliicts of tlve of runs. overcredulous overgorge overpainper oversorrow, c. overcrowd overgreat overpassion- overspin generation. 2. Itoi. That part o'ver, adr. [In poetiy often contracted to o'«*.] 1 . So overcunning overgreatnesa ate ovcrstore of the pistil of a as to pass from one or two sides or places to the other; overcurlous overgreedy overpassion- overstrict rtower in which to or from the opposite the side; across some intervening overdaring overgross ately overslrong «»vuk-!t are pro- space or barrier, as a sea, river, road, or fence. overdellcate overnappy overpatient overstudious - overcagerly overhigh overpopulate overtax ing of one person to that of another, as by personal overeagertiess overhlghly overpopula- overtedlous delivery, awlgnment, or transfer; as, to pay over monev; overeamest overtnaul- tiontlon overtempt which bi^ * overeamcstly gence rUwOmr^. r-*^tZ)***''"*'?*'"**»^*?*LJ^ to make orer an estate; to deliver or«r a prisoner. ^o overpotent overttre 5. overearnest- overlnfluence overpraise as to bring the under overtoil or lower side upward, or to turn nc88 overjealous overpraising fon'pomw o»«7 of oneof U»C*ir|Wf'«W- overtroubled (irtmr ^ IS n. I li m down or lower an upperor upright part; as, to turn one's overelegant overkind overpressure overvaluation /ort^.wilh. fiW oealnU piMMta (p7 A. I W 1 hand overi to tip a boat oter; to lean, Ijend, or topple overemply, v. overknowlng overprompt overviolent „ 1 A •uprrior ovmiT. ft. An iarvriorofmrr. <»er. 6. Across the brim; so as to overflow; as, my cup overexclte overlactatlon overprompt- overwary overlade o'vale. o'vt'i Of -\H. a. Having a shape somewhAt re- mnnetb oeer. 7. In a position beyond an inter\-cning overexclte- ness overwealc ment overlarge overproud overweary, r. s^Tinblinir :i lunt'itudtnal section of a nen's egg- space; at some distance m a given direction; yonder; as, ^g; overexert overlate overprovldent overwet, n. ("hap^d: sp<'< iticitlly said of leaves. {< smoke is rising over there. 8. So as to cover or reach overexertion overlavish.a. overprovoke overwind, r. I.. okUum, < wru//*,' egg.] o'va'^ledt* across the entire surface or extent of something; so as overexqulslte overlearned overqulet ovcrwoody — o'^vaieia-cn'nl-natet a. Ovate to traverse a surface or area in many directions or to overfainet, v. (»verlearnedly overquletness ovcrwoiTy, n. with Mlendcr tapering apex. — o. •c)rlln- touch or affect It at many points; from side to side; from overfar overlearned- overrack overzealou« draeeoMA, a. Between orate and rrlln- end to end; completely; throughout. overfatigue, r. ness overrank, a. overzealoiisly dniK.Mu.— a.idellvl^t a. Ovate wftb a & n. overleaven overreadlly Th» top* and side* of the fallls aeaUered C'-ii'lt iicy to be trfanffolar.— ••lancro* an over with pebbles of Cb«rt ... in irraAi numbers. < *ver-«ct', O'vcr-act', v. I. t. 1. To act or perform ale, 't. Between ovate lanceolate.— and '<« Oeol. Surveif o/Caitada. ro). ti, p. 838. [D. bros. '87.] to excess; render with exaggeration o.iublons. '(. Between ovate and ohlong. or too much action; o.irotundale* a. Between nvate and 9. Figuratively, from beginninjj toend; so as to pass the as, to overact humility; to overact one's part in a play. - tinfl. -o.iotubalate, a. Ovate with a main points of something in review, whether thoroughly 2t. To influence unduly; overinfluence. - itnjlat<- tin -o.tveDtrlcaHe. (f. Ovate or cursorily; as, to think or talk a matter ot#r; read hover II. i. To act more than is necessary.— o"ver-ac'- witti A Ft welling un one side. carefully; glance It orer.rre/-. iw.10. Forror a secondsecoiiu or anomeranother tloii,•«,«.n. Excessive£:.Aeerwive actionueiio or performance. o'vnic, 'iv***l, n. Elitteddfodlc *'* \ , An grad- An r>vni« i o«f " *'"^- time; with rep4>tition;; once more; once again; as, o*ver-af-fect't, rt. To" cacare for unduly. iwt.-. who IM neither *" "^"* anew; Ijard nor drtild. 'it. adv. In ^ Place respect, let us try that over: I wouldwi it U^n . o'ver-all't. every or o'ver-al't. \ phiJ'/«oph*T; M ni^m of leiiem or srlence; also, a teacher: pjiv times over. 1 1 o'ver-all», O'vyr-Slz, n jH. 1. High loose trousers of al.-aili.-r of i.till'.«.[.hy. L< W.of^flfl.] Beyond the assigned or expectedexpecn-d quantity; so as to con- p canvas or like material worn by workmen over their o'vate-l>', .' \' t-ii. ii/Jc, In an ovate form or manner. stttnte a surplus; as, something left n-ver; five times and clothing for protection from soiling and wear. H. [Gt. 4»-vu'llf»ii, (> w -bun. n. I, Anv spontancoQS expres- three over. 12. Excessively: iniproj)erly used as an Brit.l (1) Water-proof leggings. (2) cavalryman's ' fKfpular homagr- and applause; an enthusiastic adverb, bein^ really the preposition used in compounds; A ' jj^a'king-trousers. II of a succe^hful or popular person. u^over anxious (propeTfjriy overanaoveranaious, anxious over or reasonable ® ver-arch', O'vcr-drch'. I. /. To areh over; form 'aI (jnutt h*d htxn the hero of Dopfttmlleled otxttiont.tx- bevond a degree). IS. In the condition of an arch above; hang over like an arch. uuiiuitf over rvn of tim* and Uiroagli hk lour arMud Uw worM. being done, ended, or past; at an end. "- - V. It [the Bible] over'arches the dreariest raverns of dpRpnir Bus FooRK/£«mMi«mM«svol.tt.ch.9»,p.3R3. [w. a. H.] The rnrat rtonr of Hfc — hope, and it* folfllroent or diaappoint- with the bow of promise. JOHN CUMMINU ment — gt'nerallj' before is Apocalyptic Sketches second 'I fir/ .\ iM-coiidaiT u m^er middle life reached._ A triamphal honor. It was series, lect. ii, 40. [L. a. B. JuuA Kavanaum Eng. Wtmtenof letter* ch. [t.'W.] p. '5i.| ihfi! latter being conceded only 19,p.S87. II. i. To extend as an overspreading arch. .--lined under circumstances of Phrasos; — over avaiatoncemore; afresh: over.— o. , »" ., , In of; o'ver-arm'', o" vgr-dndnn", rt. Cricket. Same as overhand. I iirtive of great national Joy. asalDMl, front opposite.— o. and abere, beyond iinph. what was estimated or Intended; in excess.-o. and o. 1. o^ver-aw', o^'ver-awd'. Overawe, etc. Phil. 8oc. j ~ ' "' " II Agaln and again; repeatedly; as. I told him over and over. ver-aM^e', O'v^r-S', vt. To overpower or restrain •-v:i iM nil-- :Mi , o. :r)r llndraceoust ctc. Bame — by » -i***' «>VAT1. %, Kepcatedly over, as, to sew oner and nrcr. awe; daunt with excessive awe. o'ver, prep. 1. In higher place or position ov'tu. .11 an oven. than: with That majirstio silence [of Christ at his trial] . overawedeven the idea of some relation to the hard Koinan into ov'eu, ri. 1. A ctianilMT in which substances are aril- or effect upon; ei*|)ecialiy, respect and fear. Farhar Silence and Voicett ser. xi, p. 288. [macH. '91.] flcially heated for the puri>oM-fl of baking, roasting, an- higher than and extending beyond : with the idea of cov ering, or of seeming to hang, rest, or move ab*>ve: ai>ove: Synonyms: see a hash ; BKownKAT. ;ihFL" • ifl'-aily: il) .\n enclosed chamber of B,thele sky* isOTCT-our heads; the cliff hangs over the sea; o^ver-aw'tult, a. Filled with excessive awe. which fo«K! is c«ok«^. (i!) A large ** ver-awii', vgr-Sn', vt. To cover as with a canopy .'. the smoke rises over the city. 2. In higher power, au- variiHisly constructed, used by ba- overshadow. thority, or station than; in command or control of; as, 2^ i <..k.-wr>w. (4) A furnace foras- '^"'"i. , ver-bal'ance, vfir-bal'ans, vt. 1 . To exceed as Mt;. a leer. to place a junior over a senior officer. ® *" ^'^ht, value, or imi)ortance; Weigh down; outweigh; from their tme; as. aaaeaN The b. of power given to man or^ man. the better. Work9, ». '83.] preponderate I n i; ! gradually cooling met!etals or CHAKKING Introductory Remarka p. Ia. U. a. Retreating is not away, is fli. 3. In higher (wtimation, excellence, dignity, or value ninnintf nor stavinK wisdom when the ]'- danger overbalancen the hope. Cervantes Don Quixote tr, bv dry- than; in to; " suixrnority as, the advantages that the edu- Jervas, pt. i. bk. iii. ch. 23, p. H8. (P. A c] itik' ».. i)ni 1 i-lnin* cated have over the ignorant. (I. . .: I. :.!.*' pon-e- 2. To cause to lose balance; disturb the equilibrium of; The advaotafre which old persons poMese otvr young ones is ex- roHNiiiiu lO. as, ha overbalanced himself and fell. or.H.. iireto. i perience^ Lixsaa/^/ Elh. voi. ii. bV. iii. ch p. 106. [l 75.] ^ o'ver-bal"anoe, 0'vcr-bal-«ns, W. (O'vcr-bal'ans, C), Itiirnlnic lllr«i; 4. W ith supremacy alwye. as in the r(«u t of . US. [t. *f. 'M.l cover dr tx> 'A with an proU-ct: as, put a shawl over one's shoulders, ©"ver-bal'llet, a. Too rich or fertile, o^'vpr-bnt'telt. arw-hor Upon in such a way as U> be supiM)rted by or conilnu- 6. depend o^'ver-bear', O'vfr-bar', v. 1. t. 1 . To overpower, - -' 004 r i tmkcni' Ovens for Anacallng: used io msDU- from; as, to sling a musket or«rr one s shoulders; to throw as''asrby determination- or argument; repress; subdue. • " . i:i^ rar- a cloak ower one's to fftctuiing tfn-plate arm. 7. Soas pass or extend across; Always he [Christl applit^ for men's >titln- ament, and did not owr- in motion al>ove or on the surface of; so us Ut reach or bear them with even heavenly force. Ml M hine a. 4any bakers* oven having mecha- occupy a position on the farther side of; across. HtoRRs Divine Ortyin Chrintianity lect. iii, p. 85. [raK. a s.] ii.. Mie the work). reelfO. 'for liakem, having irrer 'iniliui..ii« rt-.-ii, revolving o. *f*^>r t»ak, Tknntson Maud xxiii, st. 1. crush down; overpower. 3+. To overbalance. raveling o. ifor Inker*, having a traveling aproo). S. Reaching to a higher point than, or so as to Row over II. I. To l)ear too much fruit. a a =^ out; ell; = feud. Ifl = future; = : the; lA c k; churcb; db go, sins, i^k; «o; tbio; sh = asore; F. boA, dttne. <^from; [, obsoUie; U variant. 41 overbearanoe 1254 overglaze

life i> letting off lt« aver- O'vcr-diu', a. 1 Finarwe. Remaining nn- n'^Tpr.bpRi-'Rncp O'verMrans n Arrogsnce. He »« «t that ebnllieni age when ©"ver-dne', . »rcIn"}. time with a new color. n. The major triad o"ver-eat', Cvsr-It', D. \. t. 1. To surfeit (oneself). JS^o/SSJfb^eat of aSTiCT-t Aiv o'ver-oliord", O'vfir-cSrd-, Mm. chord. ^e™«««™«. «*>.• *»RtTR*HV IMPERIOUS bascd OH auv glvcn tolic: the common Of coune. nobody is bo vulgar as to oivreaf himself. over, CTiurc/i eer. ii. 69. [h. '76.] ' <«/( Cver^-Iimfe'.O'vgrcialm'.rl. [Archaic] To climb dinah M. Ckaik Sermone Out o/ p. _^"vf? hcir'lii«'-lV" ' — o"Ver-bear'- o'vei--cloth",i-i'ver-clfltli-,«. Anendlcssapron.lnsomcpa- eat all over, as a pasture; also, to eat over again. IHK-IICSK.• ..« .in., n.fi 2t. To machines, carrying the paper to the piess.rolls. , TV, h»i.rt Alvivo ni- nv^r per-maklng ,, To eat to exoesa ' cover with clouds: o-ver-eloud', o-vsr-elaud' ,)^ To 0^ P-en-trif. «. 1. To entreat to e=i. S-verlblT 0-verlVd^ r i: / l^o exceed LbUi: „,?v'eV.e„T?reaJ° "'"'"l o^ef; figuratively, to darken with depression and cess. To win overly entreaty. iuZ^n,lhi:\-outbid as, totnnr<^kdori. dmg, ^ gjooni; as, to OTwrfoiid happiness with bad news. o'ver-estt, a. Uppermost. pay tooueariyior. offertoomuchfor: o'ver-eoat", O'ver-cOf, n. An extra outdoor coat worn o"ver-ei»'tl-mate, O'vgr-es'ti-met, vt. To value too greatcoat;' topcoat. highly; give an CKcessive^aluation to. -»":,*K.a°Ji'"*M'' To ^utlZ- Survive over a suH; a Material i/rlr^^ lIlJf»M?»l n-tor hln' .' 1/1 Tndianersp or o'TCr-eoaflnfi;, O'vef-COfing, n. FobrulS. Nothing U easier than to owr-esf/mafe the depth of a passing E. s.PH.,^s,on,o/^e*sch.6,p.U7. [o.*co. .77.! 'So^a;va^• a\ To blow a^rSI of for making overfoats "»^";.""b^wind L, ,„ __. ,„„ '"""T ™'' ,^ -<''-r-e«"U-ma".tl«„, .. The act of overesti- J"ver-com', V. \. t. 1 . To obtain the _ Jo'^i S-p^ticJ^an'L'i^^S-r''"^'™"'"''"'* S''"v^';.To\^;\%^^;firt„'m'r.^, TrT.To'o^i'^'tli, mating; excess of valuation. 'ver-es'tl-iiiate+. jHJwer over or the mastery or control of, as the result o"ver-ex-pose', 0"vgr-ex-pOz',. vt. [-posed; -po'sing.] II. i. 1. Naut. 'To blow with excessive violence, so over; of a contest; subdue; surmount; overpower;^ vaiic[uish; To expose excessively; specifically, in photography, to that topsails are reefed. 2+. To blow pass away. '^ .--.-,--. . . conquer; as, to overcome a fault. 2. [Archaicl Hence, (a plate) in taking picture, makinglakin a ©"ver-blow'*, r/. [Archaic] To cover with oloom; lay expose too long a or scatter flower* on. to go beyond; excel. 3t. To come unexpectedly upon; negative with too little contrast of light and shadow. ©"rer-blown", O'vgr-blOn', pa. 1. Blown away; overtake. 4t. To spread or extend over; overflow; — o"ver-ex-po'sure, n. hence, forgotten; over, ©"vcr-blowe't. 2. Burnt cover, St. To pass over or above. o^ver-eye't, f(. To observe or superintend. outface; outstare. by reason of an excessive blast: said of steel made by the II. 8. To achieve the mastery; gain the upper hand; o"ver-face'T, "' To a. Overshot; as, b.b over/all wheel. Besaemer process. gain the day; conquer. [< AS. ofermman, < ofer, over, o'ver-falin, o'ver-fall"t. «. A dangerous bank near the surface of productive of flowers; also, S-^/m/imcum-an, come.J^AtiiP 1 «-c.r''i.r.rr»mn't rscnt nrOlisl 1. o"vor-blo\vn''',7)a. Too + ow «•;«">•"« tl^«^°I- " ""^-J- the sea. rapid sea.current formed by the pecullarl- ,«'n«'^k> 3. A past the flowering season ; withered. Synonyms: »« ""'iri KJ^J^s. t,gg „, tht bottoin, or by winds, tide, etcf a race. 3. A o'vcr-board", O'vgf-bOrd', adv. Over the side of or — o"ver-com'a-bl(e, a.—o"ver-com'lng-Iy, cataract; waterfall. out of a boat or ship; from a vessel into the water; as. adv. o"ver-fnine't» tJ/. To celebrate beyond desert. n. [Scot.] The burden; refrain, as of a song. to fall overboard "o''ver-bord''t.— lo throw over- o'ver-come", o"ver-fare', o'vgr-fsr', »«. To pass or Journey over, board, to throw from or out of a boat or ship; flgura- And aye the o'ercomeo' his sang o''ver-njwn't, W. To flatter excessively, „,w»« Charlie!' lively, to discard; renounce: desert; betray. ^,»«" "'S/'";'","'? o"ver-flred',0"vgr-faird', a. C'eram. Subjected to an JFae s jife /or ivince CftorKe st. 1. ©"ver-bod'y. O'vgr-bedl, w. [Kare.] To make excessive- William Glkn excessive or destructive heat in firing. excess of body to'. ow'er-come"tf ow'er-word"t. lymaterlah'glve an , , , o"ver-fl8h', O'vgr-flsh', «;<. 1. ToTlsh (a l>ody of wa- 1 One of Christian o"ver-boll', O'vgr-beil', vi. 1 To boil excessively. 2. O'ver-com"er,0'ver-cum-gr, n. . a ^^ jq depletion. 2. To catch (fish) in excess," so as to To boil over. sect founded in 1881 by M. H. G. Spoflord, of Illinois, exhaust the stock reside. o'ver-bold", B'vgr-bOld', a. Unduly bold; Impudent.— who went with a colony to Jerusalem to They o"ver-float', O-vg'r-flOf, vt. [Rare] To Inundate, n. II, o'ver-bold"ly, <(dp.— o'ver-bold'^nesBt believe that those who overcome (Rev. 11, 17, 26) are saved o"ver-flood', O'vcr-flud', vl. To flood over; inundate. o'ver-boundt, adr. Across. Immediately after death, while all others, though eventu- wt\.M^^' A-vorhrnrl'\cr-brQa ,ij?.t^f FPnPt 1 Tnlowatcnoverwntj>h ovpr Then soon, with the emblem of truth overflowing. o yer-brood ,0 L^oet.J foreland than one has the means of cultivating profitably, And dripping: with coolness, it rose from the well. with protectmg care; brood over. vt. or trl- o"ver-crow', O'ver-crG', [Archaic] To crow Samuel Woodworth The Bucket st. 2. Hie Spirit over»broodtng all, Eternal love remainB. umph over. o"ver-craw't, WmrriEB Our Master st. 9. 2. To flow over the banks or brim of the containing ves- o'ver-cup'^soak", 0'vfir-cup'-Ok% n. 1 . The bur-oak. ©"ver-brow', 0"vfir-bran', vt. [Poet.] To overhang %, The swamp post-oak (^^rn/s^yra^a). sel by reason of fulness. [< AS. qferjlbwan., < qfer, like a projecting brow; impend. ©"ver-cur'taiiit, vt. To conceal as by a curtain; obscure. over, -\~ flfiwan, flow.] dls- Synonyms: see inundate; overwhelm. ©"ver-bulld', O'vgr-bild', v. \, t. 1 . To cover with o"ver-dare', O'vgr-dar', p. I, (. To daunt by daring; The act of overflowing, buildinge excessively or faster than required by the in- pirit: deject. II. i. To-be daring to excess; be rash. ©'ver-fl©w", 0'vfir-flo% n. 1. ^''"'^'''''"^^ *"" the state of being overflowed, or that which flows over; crease of population. 2. To build npoli or oven " "' '"^P""' denS^te l??^Bh-7o'c5hardT aflood; inundation; hence, superabundance; profusion; II. i. Toerecthousesfasterthanrequiredbythegrowth^,?^,^^;^^^^^ [Rare.] Till and after as, an OT'i?7:;?(W/' of good feeling. 2. The passage or outlet of population, or in excess of one's means. nightfall; in the dusk; after dark. oppress bulk. bywhich any excess of water or other liquid may escape; o"ver-bulk't, c(. To overwhelm; by o"ver-date', 0"ver-det', vt. fArchaic] 1. To mark i7. To burden with too an overflow-pipe or -basin. 3. Pros. Versein which the o"ver-bur'den, O-vfir-bur'dn, ^^,'^^^ ^ ^^^ j^ter than the actual one; postdate. 2. sense is continued through two or more lines. great weight; overweight; overtask. o"ver-bur'- To exist or continue beyond (the correct or appointed tnent. — o''vcr-flow"sba"8in, n. A basin having an over- , - . . time), or to cause to bo. , ., , do flow-pipe to prevent the water from rising above a certain o'ver-bur"den, O'vsr-bur'dn, n. 1. An excessive ^/yeri'deam, w. An amount In excess. level.— o.ibug, ?i. [Local, TJ. S.] A harmless carabid burden. 2. In mining, alluvial soil or detritus lying o'''Ter-deave^ ©"vgr-div' vt, [Scot. & Prov. Eng.] To beetle {Plntyjius lyiaculicolUs) occasionally appearing In npon a bed of ore that has no cap-rock. 3. In a quarry, completely deafen; stun with noise. vast swarms in southern California. — o.!8:aKe. n. A the waste that lies above the good stone. The world is over-deaved with Bpeech. waste-pipe to a wet gas-meter to insure accuracy in regis- J. Preston Car(oo7is, 37i« Good o/ st. 8. ©"ver-burn', O'ver-burn', v. \. t. 1. To bum un- Mabgaret /( tration by maintaining a constant water-level and to provide and removal of Impurities. duly. 2+. To wrap in flames; burn over. II. i. To ©"ver-de-vel'op, O'ver-dg-vel'op, vt. To develop ex- a means for change of water — o. nieetinsTt a subsidiary meeting organized by or for bnm too much, as with excessive zeal. cessively ; specifically, in photography, to develop (a plate) those persons who can not get into an overcrowded prin- O'vgr-bai', To buy extravagantly as re- to too great a degree, as ny too long process or by using ©"ver-buy', vt. cipal meeting.— o.spipe, n. A waste-pipe attached to a gards either the quantitv or the price. too strong a developer.— ©"ver-de-vel'op-ment, n. cistern, bath, or other vessel, to carry away all water that a. Covered over; bedecked. ©^ver-by', O'ver-bai', adv. Near by; a little way on. o"ver-dight't, _ rises to Its level. ©"ver-can'o-py, O'vjjr-can'o-pl, vt. [Archaic] To cover ©"ver-d©', O'vgr-du' v. J, t. 1. To do excessively ©''ver-flow'Ing, O'ver-flO'ing, pa. Running over the over aa with a canopy. carry beyond the ordinary or accepted limit. Specific- brim or edge; so full that the contents run over; hence, ©"ver-ca'pa-blCe, O'vfir-k^'pa-bl, a. Too capable. ally: (1) To exaggerate, as by overacting; burlesque; copious; plentiful; abundant. €>'ver-care'", O'ver-cSr', n. Excessive care or anxiety. caricature; as, he overdoes his part. (2) To overtax the groodness de- ©"Ter-care'iul, o'ver-cSr'ful, a. Careful to excess. We believe that God in his infinite overfioiting strength of; fatigue; strain; exhaust: usually in the sires, and from all eternity has desired, the salvation of all men. ©"ver-car'ry, O'vgr-car'i, v. I. t. To carry too far; passive or reflexively. A. T. Bledsoe Theodicy pt. ii, ch. 4, p. 302. [c. A PH. '56.J go beyond; overshoot. II. i. To go to excess. I was overdone; and some of the leading physicians . . had see ablndant; redundant. vt. To carve across or over. Synonyms: o^ver-carve't* made up their minds that I never would preach any more. ,„ . — o"ver-llo w'ing-ly, ailv. ©"ver^casf, O'vgr-cgst',?;. I, /. 1. To cover, as the Autobiography ch. 302. [a. 8. B. C. G. FlNNET 23, p. ^•^ state of flowing over, sky with clouds; spread darkness over; overshadow; ©"ver-llow'iiig, /(. The act or (3) To cook to excess ; spoil by too much cooking. •*• orthatwliichoverflowe; hence, copiousness abundance. make gloomy. 2. To sew (the edge of a fabric or or [Poet.] To surpass in action; outdo; excel. O'vgr-flush', vi. [Rare.] To flush or color a seam) with long wrapping stitches and thus prevent o"ver-flush', Strong men, and wrathful that a stranger knight over; flush deeply, raveling. 3. Surg, To neal over; cover (a lesion) with Should do and almost overdo the deeds „ "ver-flut'ter,_ ^_ O'ver-flnt'^, vt. To flutter over. skin. 4. Plumbing. To go over (a wiped joint) with a Ofl^ncelot. Tennyson Etain« St. 21. o'ver-flux" 5'ver-flux' CFlare.] Excess; exul»erance. hot iron to give ribbed glazed lines. 5. Bookbinding. II. i. To labor too 'assiduously; exert oneself excess- o"ver-fly','o"vcr-flai', vt 1. To outstrip in flight;

leaf) in order to permit its _ do.] To double (an edge, as of a ively. 1e opened to full width. a furnace or a stove. 3. An arrangement of flues to o;'vei-froiU't. c(. o'ver-iEar"iiient, O'vgr-gar'ment, n. Anouter gannent. o"ver-catch't, vt. To catch up with or overtake. lorcefnrrp airnir tnronenthrniiP-b aft hrirk.kilnDncK'kiin aownwamtiownwiird iromfrom lisitft top,t^T.- • , j^ Arrogant. II. n. Presmnptlon. o'ver-clianBet* n. Excessive variability. also, the heated air and gas so forced through the kiln. ©"ver-Baze^ O'ver-gez', vi. 1. [Kare.] To gaze or look "ver-charge', O'vyr-chOrj', v. I. ^ 1. To charge. - - • - o'ver-drauglit"$. as to be dazed. " .1, ii 1 1 over. 3t. To gaze too long, so ae a person, justly due, as a sale or an more than 18 m ^^//^^jr-draw', 0"ver-drS', vt. 1, C&m. To draw o"ver-get', OVer-get', r(. i. [Rare.] To get over; recover account. 2. To load, as a flrearm, with too great a against (an account with a bank or person) for a larger from. 2t. To 6veriake. charge. 3. To weigh down with an excessive load; sum than stands to the credit of the drawer. 2. To o'^ver-aild't. vt. To gild over; varnish. v£r-giv;, overburden; overload; oppress. 4. To exaggerate. draw or strain excessively; as, to overdraw a bow. 3. o^ver-give', ^'•^^I;.£ ^^^ "P***^ ' " give""'" lavishly.I^J^^^-it^*^ Part of the poetry, it is true, is in a false and overcharged taMe. To make an exaggerated representation of, whether in p\er; surrender, II. i. To [Rare.] glance over, Leigh Hunt A Day by the Fire. Men Wedded to Books p. 307. (IpIifiPdtinn writing enpfrh orjirtion- t^xnvfrprRif- o"ver-8:lance', 5'ver-glgns', p(. To aelineation, wnimg, speecn, or action exaggerate. over; decorate la. BROS. 70.] o"ver-fflaze',*<^'^ O'ver-gief',. vt.''*'• 1. To glaze o'ver-draw", O'ver-dro", n. 1. A dram or demand in " J'!H,**= '- 'v. ^.'\'.' >• '. '^ 5. To bring an extravagant or fanciful charge against. Bupcrflclally. 2t. To hide (an Inferior quality) with some- excess; an overdraft. 2. Same as ovekduaw-ciieck. II, i. To make an unjust or exorbitant charge. thing better. — o'ver-draw"*clieck", n. Same as overciieck. Suitable lorpaint- ~ overcbarired mini;, s<'<> mine. o'ver-glaze", O'ver-elez', rt. Ceram. ver-drive', O'vgr-dralv', vt. To drive too hard. o'ver-charge'^, O'ver-chflrj", n. 1. An excessive pe ing upon glazed articles: said of vitriflable piemcnts. horse; hence, to nse too much. on por- cnniary demand or account. 2. An excessive load or ©''ver-drop'trpf- To drop over; overtop; overhang. o'ver-glazc". n. Ceram. An additional glaze vitri- burden. 3. An excessive charge, as in a firearm. o"ver-drown't, vt. To drench to excess; wet through. celain when the first has been painted upon with

•ofa, arm, 9»k; at, fftre, Record; elgmfint, $r = over, eight, § = usage; tin, machine, g = r«new; obey, n6; n»t, n«r, atgm; full, rule; but, bom; aisle; * ,

overglide 1235 overpower

flable colore, or when byreaeon of defect* aeecondglaze o'ver-fs'^sue, O'vfir-ish'C, n. Finance. An excessive so called by the West-Indian negroes, who saperstitiously is necessary. or unauthorized issue; as, an overissue of bank-notes. plant it as a watchman on the boundaries of plantations. •"ver-Blirfe't, r(. To ^Ilde over. ©"ver-joy', O'vgr-jel', t?^ To overcome with joy; de- ©"ver-look'er, 0'vt;r-luk'fir, -«. 1. One who over- o^vtT-Kloum', O'ver-Kliini', r(. To cover with gloom. light or please excessivelv: commonly in the past parti- looks. 2. An overseer. 8ui)erintendent, or inspector. •'ver-Kliii*.;'. as, n. Same as orlop. 'H".' i'T'' ? rii.— 1 T„ »„ „- i™. ciple; he was OifWoved at the discovery. o'ver-loop"t, • ''"" o'ver-lord", O'vfr-lSrd-, n. I. Eng. Hiet. In Saxon neyoier.Jvm?r" cover.asaoisiance.mvpT^iViliiai're o'vcr-joy", «. Intinse jov; wild delight: transport. ©"ver-luiup', O-ver-jorap', ?•(. 1. To jump beyond; tmies, a superior king or chief who outranked and held LT::rdU^''.o^."^BK?vtro'2r.r&,.t.ll leapof;r^ \l authority over other lords. O'ver-ktllg", O'verKing', H. A KlHg holoing 8Way Harold . . . made all his sons kings, on condition that they n iD»« 1 T«™«K^^-^n.,i. noao. aniiMUHi. nnti-tx-Al ^+ ^°To *^- over inferio^rkings'or prtnces; asuzerafn: as th% Eng^ .h„„,d .ft«r hi. dea^, ack.„„i„d,e^K^^^ ^I-lK^Isa'SS^fopp-rSf-irr^-cr?''^- h. h. boyesen iiorj, o/ Aonnri, ch. 70. lo. p. p. S6.] . lish formerly of Scotland. 5, p. lit. 1 1 "To go by; pass »w»y; vanish, a. To proceed kmgs were ot«r*«nff» to uiuMual lengths; li? extravagmnt. o'ver-knee", O'vgr-ni-, a. Reaching above the knee. 2. Hence, one who holds supremacy over another. ©"ver-flrrace'T. P*. To grace or dignify beyond desert. —overknee wnders, water-proof boots reaching Thecommunityis his owr/orrf.- and the very constitution of civi- lised life ^ives rise to the duty that ownership 0*ver-gratn , O'ver-gren', Vt. & Vi. In painting, to above the knees, and used chietly by anglers. must be made a com- "<"> good to the community w. s. Lilly On Right and Wrong, grain over (a surface that has already been gralnctf;, as ©"ver-la'bor, 0'vj;r-le'b9r, it. 1 . To labor excessively ^""""on/p.*. Ic.*h. w.j in putting on a finishing grain. See top-oraininq. on; be ovemice with. 2. To overwork, ©"ver-la'- o'ver-Iord"8liIp, n. The position of overlord, o'ver-sraln'er, O-vtrgren'er, n. Painf. A thin, flat, bonr^ , — o'Tcr-Iy. 5 vcr-l «. [Archaic.] Negligent; Inattentive; long-bristled brush nsed in imiuUng the grain of woods, ©"ver-lad't, pa. Put upon; overreached. , 1. ©"Ter-lald', Cvsr-Md', a. J/er. Overlapping; doubled superficial. 4. tColloq.] Excessive «''»er-irra»*'t.rl To cover wlSgraaa. o'ver-ly, verdure; render partway. „ ad„. 1 . [Archaic & Colloq.l To an excessive S'Jer:5r"?'t,"(. l?To™Terwirh , ^ . ^ brlUlant and fresh. 2. To palntout or conceal (adefect). o'ver-laiid", O'ver-land", a. & adv. Journeying by or degree; too much; too. 2t. Carelessly. o'ver-ground^, O'vfir-graand', o. Being or lying principally by land; going or lying across the land. o^'ver-ly'Iiig:, O'ver-lai'ing, a. Lying over or on top. above ground; as, an oc«rffrDun(f route. — overland route, a route chletty or entirely by land; o'ver-mnu, n'vsr-man. h. (Gt. Brit.) Coal-mining. The foreman of, the underground o^ver-ffro-sr' O'ver erO' v If 1 To overenread * transcontinental route; speeiflcally, that between Great workings. Britain and India by way of the Isthmus of Suez, and any o'vcr.nian"nert, adv. Excessively. wimgrowm,=Tifh oSiurth^ coverA>voF\iinhwiinneroage.horhan^- generallymtmiW useuused min methe oneof the routes between the Atlantlccoast and thePaclflc o'ver-man"«eI, O'ver-man'tl, n. Ornamental cabinet- past participle; as, gardes oeergrown. a coast across the plains and the Rocky Mountains. work surmounting a mantelpiece. with be revived, but for a love A low overgroum weed* may o'ver-land^er, o'v^r-land'er, n. 1 . A traveler who o^ver-iua«k', O'ver-mosk' vt To hide as by covering feat by natonl decay ttore is no reearrection ioumevs over foreign countries. 2. One wbo crosses a withw ilu a mask'luiusii, screen-st^reeii couteai.conceal OalL Haiulton ycir ..ifmojpA^re ch. 11, p. IM. {T. * r. *<5.] , countrji„,,«t-;. K«by land.1ot,h _ _ . ,., . I.. , . . ©"ver-niasf. Over-most', t><. JVom*. To supply with a grow too rapidly or t«o big for; outgrow-; as, to ». To o'ver-lap', O-vgr-lap', f. I. t. 1. To lie or be folded mast or masts too long in proportion to the hull mergnw one s strengtti. St. To oppress; weigh down partly upon; extend in srace or Ume so as to lie parUy o'ver-mas'ter, O-ver-mgs'tVr, rt. 1. To obtain con- incraise nndnJy; too Urge; a«,]»ewoiUd ".• To grow upon or be partly colncitlent with. 2. To cause to lap trol over by force, wiU, or some superiority; overcome; not haveJ- the principaliUes overgrme. or fold over upon. conquer; overpower. 2t. To hold by force, O'vergron', o'ver-grown', pa. 1. Grown beyond n. i. To extend so as to rest partly on the next. Synonyms: see conquib the natural or 'normal size; unsuitably or abnormally o'ver-Iap", O'verlap', n. 1. The state, condition, or o'ver-matoh', O'vsrmach', tif. 1. To be more than large; as, an (mmroum boy. 2t. Fully grown. extent of overlapping; also, the part that overlaps. a match for; be too powerful or skilful for. lHabytbuconrtMloonvlop th.t the conOnnily of the world The old hnnlem were a cU' eari'^'' and underlying one, so overlies the far of mammalg: pFucked in dressing. "»^8j™ >^^ . . many *'7'',J'" ^ ^ „ j ^ , superior decree the margins of the upper stratum rest iipon rocks ^ o^ver-hand'. O'ver-hand', t>t. In Kwing, to overcart. ^ -'^synSnym." ™conouhb ^ O'ver-hand-, a. Bo«*S« Criektt. o'ver-hand", 1. A ^?«LSS',i?S„l?„';;*nf7ni7CS'^".,"n^i tV^'lim^^^^ Cvfr mach', n. 1. One who or that I)..liverim5 deliv«^ toe b|jU wi^ toe is th« blaah'lnK*lyt* adr. with some others, too uimble, they could not imagine how 1 should bowler: ball, o'vep-ann'l. Jfi- "" an ovtrhand 2. O-vsr-lOnch', rt. Ship-buUding. To - o^'Ter-launch', '""""s'SPK'i^^r''^.,!/, . v , .^.i rw . . .7, Swire » orfc,, Oill.t^- pt. .,, eh. 3, p. i«. [w p. s. -Ti.) Mng. Done from below: said of 8t.,ping. 1 Made by unite by longspllcea ofwuirfa: said of tifnbers. , „ contest which carrying the thread over and over; as, anoc(. 1. To handle too 4 To snan bv laving a bridge across' St To weiirli "',>'^'""'"^'"^''U' "• much. To mention too often * " "' * """• ^"""'^ Overmuch. 2. |o^ '^^, T^'lr^mf'tl^U]. o""V" nu^k'le?'^'""""'' O-vsr.hang-, c. I. f. l.Toprojector o'ver-hauK', _ o'Ter-lay'er, n. Onewhoortoat which overlays. o"vop.nion'eyt.rV Tobribe hanL'over; im[iend or over; as, belmminent menace; a „/„,.|,y»_ O-VBr-W, n. 1. Print. A piece of paper o'-ver-morc't, arfr. Moreover. pestilence omt/Uhjot the land. 2. To suspend from placed on the tympan of a press to make the impression o'ver-iiior"rowt, n. The day after to-morrow. above. 3. To famish too elaborately wito hangings, heavier at the corresponding part of the form, or to com- o'ver.moiit"t, a. Uppermost; above all others. II. I. To hang or Jnt over sometoing. Compare bat- pensate for a depression in the form. 2. Anything that ""»'••••""««»• O'^Sr-maunt', r<. To mount above or TSB'. rt. overUea, covers, or partly covers sometoing. 3. [Scot.] "v'^"'; surmount. These Earomaa aavaaes of the mannwith-peTiod reeortcd much A Cravat. OW'er-lar^t fScot.! Yon lowly roof, whose curling smoke OVrtnoi«nf« the mist. t»rf>.iier.itt,f<»t«f«j22|«vJWdi5H^ obahamb rae saftfcatM. 17. o'ver-lay^n*. 0-vpV , .» , • , ' ' ^' procew, or artof using overfays. 2. That which over- »'ver-niount", n. In picture-framing a mat. — o'irer-ltanc'er,w _r^^^^^a. o'ver-mucli', ver-much', a &a]ridawef«pra«eeta4bysaatvHkaaaoanndo"ver-Ieap', O'ver-ltp', vt. 1. To leap over; leap be- o ver.mnl'tl-tudet, r(. To exceed In multitude, whh »o«r inehee of wiovhl Iron which Mtwi^si) sli feet Mowlhe o"ver-name't, vt. To name over; repeat the names of. .ond- >- to mvn&m one's mark 2 To outleao L It !a. Tit ir^,,l., .. . ./ m 1. v. . _. u "•/-"™^~™«^^''»°«"''-'^'-"-}f-™Jo"ver-llKh«', 0-ver-loit', a. Too light; too gldtlv lord virtue of office. „ »r - o"ver-or'flcet, r(. To over by an Nttul. overtake gain npon In purealL light. %. (1) To or w o'ver-llglu". nvtr^olf, n. [Rare.J Too strong a o"ver-palnt't. i;(. To paint or descrllx- too vividly. To search (a ship) thoroughly for contraband goods, for o'ver-ll-upiiHt, n. Canlesaness. o"ver-part't, r(. To assign too difflciilt a part to. n. superior; ruler. persons improperly aboara, or for defecta and necfary o'ver-linat, A o"ver-paaa'^ O'ver-pgs', 1 . To pass across or over, ~° r^ repairs. Cli To clear (tackle or digging) for n*e. !i.''*"i'i'i" A?'^'. "'-r ?"il!l^„^™f„?„°r„i^?ri; a« a ri*'". 2. To pass without heeding: fail or omit to Bynonrmj: seeaxAiiiitB. notice; overlook; as.agood deed will neverbeoi.«rpa«(«(f. STJfJ^lVJ'A n TheuSiip i'vii^^^^^ o'ver-haiil", O'ver-hW, n. toorough Inspection or A SV";;jP_>"n.'.°" KJrV"''-, "J To ou?live- survive 3. To go beyond or away from; pass by or through. examination, often with view Improvements ' a to making ,' Michael Angelo himself in «,m. of hu .nblimest works orer- ^ 1 ToiivctooWg *•i.Tolivetooaitivciy.»" i- orrepairs. o"ver-taaal'In«}. _o"wVr llv'^r n " poaecdihese'nst lioundsot his art. J. M. HoppiNBarti/iiraais- O'ver-hed'. Placed or working above •°"<«««")' '• *>. In. m. co. '98.] e'ver-head", a. „»v»r.l«ad' n-^'lnd' rf To load with too heavv a P- * downw«d; an » ^ .., burten; 'vtih'a;^; «.'tS'iJto<13^ship^!^un -*• To pass beyond in degree; surpass; as, it aven>a^ ^;:il'> I'^T^^^ll^f^ endurance. To run over mentally; review. ^^J^^S^.^^ 2SS.. „v,.™«, o'ver-liad", O'vVlOd', n. An excessive loifl. 5. O'Ter-lOCk', O-ver-lec;, vt. To throw beyond toe nor- ft»r;g»«,»lckly in yo„r minds what yon remember of the tre.,. O're^hetd'f 0-?|5KdrSrf" T Ab^one's head; -"« mal position, as the bolt of a lock. atoft. Speddcally: (l)lnornearthezenlto. (2)Onthe » RuSSi^rto/Ji;n»;andlect.iii,p.ii6. [o. a. 'M.) flo„rahoJr2. >^,"«obe«bmerged:over

tt. To overtake. ""VeflpllanT', O'ver-plant' vt. plant, as a field, ."'ver-hend'S «»ver.h«.t't. Sre'Klfh'^'"'^' Tl^exiaSne'^S^^n'TcSr" 1 . To e"ver.hiB';,rt To leap over; omit; •"verfLyp't. E^ manner -^^se-' Sd-^novCT'^vew 7 ^'^^^ beyontfthe capacity to nourish. 2t. To transplant. o;vrr.h«1d'f,»«.Toholdtoohlghlvi overvalue. o'.cr-plale"', O'vsr-nlef, «. In medieval plate armor, ..'ver-lioiira", O'vsr-uurz-, n. pi. 1. Time tmtalde K2^1^hbewitch oro??,iei5^.;enchant by r^rding.^rfl^VXuhas wito anI^ evUevJ'evil eye. a piece covering a joint; i protection (1) for the shoui: and in addition to the aaaigned or iwial number of boura; Tobe^oi»r(ootodi.to r~rf»e . glance <^'» »"'' °™ »h,° ?»•; _ der (a pauldron ) or (2) for the elbow (a eubitidre).

top.: «ld of telegraph, or telephone.wlrea SynonTma: see LOsr; pabdoK; blight. mand^l or , «J!..d- aifevcea^ o"ver.|n.romi'. .•.•ver.|nf«rm',i!fc To animate to excMS. o'Ter-look".0'ver-luk-,n. 1. The act of looking over, '"^'„„"J'.^^.'t'!.^^?^^- o"»er-l»'Bne,0-vtr.^shn, i-f. iawie in eiceaa of a To as from a height. , ' o"ver°i°Sri?? O'ver m1?%( (Rare 1 To outweigh pro,»-r or authonze w, bar. not'yet n-acbcd the S'vcp.poiw": ,.. Prelinderant weight stock, TlK meet ttie demands tons created; aa to OMTiMtM ^.iritual points of twertoo*. tfj. con- ,..„., ,„, , o"ver-poIe', n-vtr-i>ol', In refining copper, to J. Bascom JVew rheoIoOT/ ch. 6, p. a", [o. p. P. '»I.] note*, or bonds; to OMriMtM tickets for an entertainment. tinue the process of iioling too long. The gold aMritec le tW Boat eainMive of all markets, to that a 2. A high point of View, as a mountain : sometimes giv- o"ver-poNt'1^. rf. To hasten, as t>y post. gnat many indlvidoals or eompuiles, rw:h acHag aader the Sep- ingaprtiiH-r name to a mountain or terrace. 3. A trifollo- o"ver-po»v'er, O'Vfr-puu'vr, vt. 1. To gain suprem- tiiit-.yi'^i^jLrit'i^'SS.'^^S'^ii^Sl^SSZ.^JirMVi^" •^ late-leaveiirliintMr(rviwnr((/ia7/n

ttaln; dttne. otuokte; variant. aa = out; •!!; Iflsbud, |9 = futwre; « = k; chorch; dli = (Ae; io, sins, l^k; ao; ab = azure ; F. boA, <,from; f, t, k .

©verpow^er 1356 overt

What plaoe can be for nn rection of matter already composed. 5. In baseball, to o'vop-»lde", O'vfr-eaid', a. Discharging over Within heaven's bound, unless heaveu*8 Lord supreme the feide: continue in a straight course beyond (u base): allowed i-aid of a dredge. We o(YrjK>iirp f MILTOK P. L. bk. ii, 1. 238. at first base, but in that case the player must return to o'ver-»ide", m/r. IKare.] Over the side. 2. To ovenvhelm by int^nfiity; overcome the self-control the base, and either remain there or continue his prog- o'ver-slght", O'vgr-sait', n. 1. An error due to inat- of; aj*, her feelinpi orrrjxfivervd her. Srnonyms: m-itonoikb. ress toward the next base. 6. To pass over in review tuntiou; an inadvertent mistake or omission. either mentally or orally; scan. [Archaic] — o*vep-po\v'er-lng;*lj',a"'ver-8Core', O'v^'f-scor', vt. To draw a score or line presence or conununlcatlon as to know that the superin- o^ver-prlze', O'v^jr-prai/,'. vf. in 1. To value excess over; draw thejwn through. tendent's wishes arc carried out; the superintendent of a of real worth. 2t. To exceetl in value, railroad will personally oversee - _^, o'ver-8ea"t, a. Coming from beyond the sea: foreign. very few of Its operations- , ^, ... T the railroad company has supreme o'ver-pro-dHo''tIou,0 vtrpro-ducshun, «. .In eco- o"ver-sea', ©-vyr-si', adv. Beyond the sea: abroad illrecUon of all Its alTalrs nomics. jirodnctmn ni excess of demand; excessive pro- without luverintenileiice or (werniglit. Contrul Is chiefly o'^ver-scas^'^ used with duction. Compare PRODUCTION. reference to restraint or the power of restraint; o"ver-seam'/b"vi;r-8lm'. I. vt. & vi. To sew over a Kood horseman lias a restless horse under perfect control o'ver-proof^O ver-prnf ,« Contannng a larger pro- hand. II. n. An overhand seam. there Is no hl^h character without self.cojtft-o;. Survett- portion of alcohol than proof-spirit: said of acoholic o'^ver-search't, r^ To search over hince Is an Invidious term sigidfviiiK watching with some- liquors having a specific gravity less than O.ltStt at 60=' F. thing of suspicion. o'^ver-see',,_ ,„O'vfir-s'l',.„.-.,..v. 1. t.,. _.1 . To^„ watch and direct See care; EKitoit; NEtsLECT. in the L niied Slates, or than 0.920 in Great Britain. the action or nerfomperformance of in order to malce sure that «;vcr-si_glu"ci|.iic8», n. Long-sightedness, O'v^rpro-pOr'shun, vt. ©"ver-uro-por^iion, Tomake or it is properly carried out, generally in accordance with a (it'pk-t 10 e\ft'w* of a true proportion. "„M!I!"";'*:.,i't'^,./ T«"^i'iS „,:„, „, ,. ,. .„k .. u design; loo^ after; overlook, sufi.ri„t*nd, or supervise; *"" ''"^"' """"• o^Ter-puT'chnm*, ci'vi;r-pOrches, ri. 1, To buy more ll-.M-M-iS^^;-, 'r\: ?? Sce^^lSslJe." as, to a w()rk or those than is needed or salable. '^+, To pay too dear. merye engaged on it. 2. To fail o'vei--size", Ovsr-salz", u. [Colloq.] Ahnormally large to see, as If by looking over Ijeyond o'ver-pur"<'liai»e, O'vjjr-pCr'chls, n. An excessive or ; hence, to pass uu- o"ver-8kip't, k<. 1. To skip or leap over- omit *j To purchase, or a dear bargain. heeded; overlook; neglect; omit. pass over or by; skip; fall to observe; neglect. 3. To avoid; escape ©"ver-pul't, ri. To overthrow. When did he of', over " Ver-»lailgll', O-Vfr-slS', v/. as seas the bows of a vessel at anchor. We had so grovelled in darknesa that we oversaw the light. . [U. S.] 1 . To reduce to inemcieucy; o'^ver-rate', O'v^r-ret', rt. To rate orvalue too highly; Kane Arctic iijjioradons vol. U, ch. 3, p. 47. [c. 4P. '66.] obstruct; override. Judge overestimate. II. i. To see over things; deceive oneself Douglas . . . waa then in favor of orernlauahing that decuiion. LINCOLN in Potit. Debater, 'SS It is both a pleasing and a humiliating consideration to me, that ""ver-Been't, rt. 1. Deceived; mistaken. ^.Intoxicated, p. 82. [F. F. A CO. '60.] the partiality of my friends greatly overrates the importancetance of o"ver-se'er, O'vcr-sfgr, H'.» H'r., wo'vsr-sir', V. I. If.' 2. To pass over or set aside in favor of another; super- my services. Washington in Sparks's '" Writings of Wa8hingt<^..' (-\iii), n. 1. One who oversees; a supervisor; superin- sede, as an officer or a legislative bill; as, the artillery July ft, ms vol. V. p. 437. iH. a. a co. '34.] odicers were tendent; especially,,, one____ who __^superintends laborers, at... overslaughed in promotion by the engi- o'ver-rRie''t, v. An inordinate valuation. their work; speciflcally [U. 8.], an ottlcial on a plaiita- neers. [< D. orerdaan, < over, over, 4-daan, slay.] o"ver-reaeli', 0*v^r-rlch', v. \, t. 1. To obtain an tion in the slave States, before emancipation, who had o'vor-slaugli", O'ver-sis-, n. ILocal, U. S.] A bar In a advantage over by trickery or deception, or through any ohstructhig naOgatlon. control of the slaves. .V*"'' illegitimate proceeding; outwit; as, he overreached his 'atef Phidias was made overseer of all the public works, which then '' ''"^P tha" friend in buying a horse. 2, To stretch out too far, as a *or *h^vnnrt*^«'beyond; as, VZ'"?!'to overdeep'Vhthe'"lhour '^f"for was a very important office, because all ttie temples and buildings ^ rising. II. i. limb or the whole body; as, he oveiTeached himself and wei-e restored. ° To Bleep longer than one intended or than customary lost Clara E. Clement Art his balance. 3. To overshoot (a mark); in sailing, and Artiste p. 10. [r. * co. '87. J hours: often refiexively: as, I merslept myself. • to pass by holding on a course farther than is necessary; 2t. An adviserto an executor appointed bvwill; acritic. o^^ver-sHde't, M.To slide as, tooi'«/';¥acAanuoy. 4. To extend over; spread so as Si to cover; as, his infiwcncti oveiTeached the whole audience. 5+. To come up to; overtake. master guardian. — overseers oflngFiwayH II'. s'.Lofflcere o'vers-iuan, o'vgrz-mjn. n. 1. An overseer. 2. Scots II. t. 1 . To strike the toe of the hind foot against the In some of the States charged with the duty of building and Law. An umpire in an arbitration. heel of the fore foot: said of ahorse. See overreaching. repairing _^ the public roads. o"ver-8iiow't, ;;(. To cover with snow; whiten. 2. Xaiit. To stand on a tack farther than is necessary: ©''ver-se'er-shlp, „ The otHce of an overseer. o'ver-soul", O'vsr-sOl', n. In Emersonian usage, the somethncs refiexively; as, tlie yacht overreached herself, ©''ver-seir. 0"vt;r^>l rt. 1. To sell more of than there spiritual being or element of the universe Synonyms: see cheat; deceive. individualized 18 or than one can deliver. 2t. To sell too dear. m or uniting together and influencing human souls. — o"ver-reach'er, p. o"ver-8Ct', O'ver-BCt', ('. \. t. J. To tumor cause to ""ver-sow', o'vyr-so', til. LRare.l 1 . To sow over; hroad- o'ver-reafh", 0'v(;r-rtch-, n. A wound of the heel or °*''''- fall upon the side or upside down; capsize; upset. '''"' '-*• To sow In excess, as seed; sow too thickly. quarter of a fore foot of a horse, caused by overreaching. The dog, ... in a mad rush at some bone or discarded morsel, „"|,?'""''1'„ '°*,°™,'" "K*'" IKrou'ld alread.v sown,. «. farriery, h I" o'ver-reacli^lng, In a kind of interference now and then overset both dish and missionary. o ver-span', ver-epan', rt. To span or stretch over. in which a horse strikes the heels of his forward feet with F. Parkman ,/esui(s in A'. ^. ch. 4, p. 28. [L. B. t CO. '67.] *> vcr-sparrcd', O'ver-spfird', a. Naut. Having too the toes of his hind shoes: including too heavy, (1) overreaching 2. To cause the destruction or downfall of; subvert- .[""K. or too many spar«: said of a vesseL proper, where he cuts or otherwise injures the feet, and overthrow; as, to ' " '°° """?'' '"' 8™"" ovenel a government. 'inST.T^R^.^'f.i/'' ? "f- ,!• T." T'"'' ('i) forging. See forging. dlloquently: used retlexlvely. 2. To say more than. rhn . H, . „„ t , J T . „ , Cho.: By a woman, fated 'Troy Wasw Ofersef andwfell to naught. o'^ver-read't, vt. To read over. o"ver-speilt't. a. Excessively fatigued; tired out. OwK^^lKREVTHayte,nnestrad,v.xy.o"ver-svreaa',ti-vfir.gpred',rl. ©"ver-read', O'ver-red', a. Having read too much. 1 P^,./ T„.„,i 1 . To spread over; i. J riiit. To set m type too much of or for; as, to over- o^ver-reck'on, O'vgr-rec'n, vt. & ri. To compute too cover or scatter over; as, the ground U overspread with a newspaper, 4t. [ProvEiig.] highly; make an excessive estimate. ^< To overcome. St. flowers. 2. To lie spread or scattered over; as, daisies To charge or assess excessively. o''ver-red'+, vt. To iwlnt or smear with red. 6t. To fill too full. overspread the meadow. II. i. To fall over; topple down. ©"ver-renf, 0-vi;r-rent', vt. & vi. To rent for an ex- o"vcr-spred', rf. Overspread. Phil. .Soc cessive o'vcr-set" Over-set,/!. 1. A turning over; upset. price; ask too high a rent. o"ver-sj»rIng', o'ver-spring', t7. 1 . To spring or leap P"'>^- Excess of composition. 3t. Superfluity. ©"ver-rlde', Cvgr-raid', vl. 1 . To overcome as if by ,?• over. ii+. To rise alx)ve; overtop, ver-sew O'vsr-sO vt. sc'w trampling under the feet of one's horse; as, to override " , , To overhand, especially o"vcr-stain'+, rt. To stain over; besmear, with close all obstacles. 2. To set aside or disregard arbitrarily stitches. o"vcr-stand't, M. Tolnslst too much on the conditions of. assume or exercise a power superior to; set at naught- ",'";'"*''"*''• 9'^fi''-*''^'J''''' '• <- To castasliadeor " "jfer-sfarc't, r. I. (.To outstare; look more fiercely : »: 6..' than. _!..„ ._ 1 1 i„ ' . darkness over; obscure; 11. 1. I o stare wildly. also, to supersede or annul in any way; as, to override overshadow. o ver-state', O'vcr-stet', vt. To state in too strong the Constitution; to override one decision by another. II. t. To make shade from above; cast gloom Lead on then where terms; exaggerateinst)itement.-o"ver.gtate'iiient, Overwhelming necessity overrides ail law. thy bower O'ershades. "• ^" exaggerated statement. W. T. Sherman Memoirs vol. ii, ch. 24, p. 404. [a. '75.] Milton P. L. bk. v, 1. 376 ' o"ver-8had'ow, Cvfir-shad'o, " 'ver-step', O-vtr-step', ». I, t. To step over or be- 3. To ride to excess; exhaust by riding; as, an overHd- r^ 1 . To throw a shad- ow over; overshade. yond; transgress; exceed. II. i. [Bare.] To miss the den horse. 4. Surg. To elide over (the corresponding oPPpnumty neglect. In solitude, ; [ AS. ofersteppan, < o/er, over, fragment): said of one end of a fractured bone. St. To some fixed idea will often take root in the mind and < grow till it oversluidow all one's thoughts. 7" Sleppan, Step.] ridedo\™; trample. 6t. To overtake in riding. Longfellow Hyperion bk. 1. oh. 7, p. 64. [h. m. a co. '82.] o"ver;Stock', O'vcr-stec', vt. To stock to excess; sup- — to override one's cominissiou, to go beyond the hounds of one's authority. 2. To cast into the shade or render insigiuflcant by com- P'^ "'"' ™ore than enough; flll too full, ""*'""**"•'''"• »"ver-roof', O'vgr-rQf, r.l. To cover with or as with a roof. parison: loom above. 3. [Archaic] To cover with pro- "'^er-stoc', n. An excessive supply, ffl'ver-stock8"t, ;i. >"vcr-rule', O'vsr-rfil', v. \. t. 1. To control by su- tecting influence; shelter. pi. Knee-breeches. perior ,,''*"*'**'';'' '."'*'!''''''>''' ^''''*- An upper story. power in a wjay contrary to the tendency or desire — o"ver-sIiad'ow-er, «. — o"vcr-8liad'.»•»« "- o"ver-straln', o-vfr-stren', of the person or thing controlletl. ow-yt, a. Overshadowing...= v. I. t. To strain or " .__-- stretch to excess; as, orera''' ri'vpr.«h« n In cooperaee a stave- E^cssive strain; over- ' exertion; as, brain-exhaustion 2. Lam, Speciflcally: (1) To set aside the authority of jointer or plane with a concave-edged bit follows overstrain, ndr. (a decision) as a precedent by maintaining a different C'vcr-sliinc't, y<. 1. To shine over- Illumine r„''",^er-strnii>\yi, Toosirlctly. ' 2 o vcr-sireaiii', doctrine in a later case. (2) To decide against or deny in surpass In shining; outshine. ver-strim', rt. To stream over, o ver-»treteli', O'vtr-strech', the progress of a suit; pronounce invalid; as, to ot'er- "'*'•"•»••*'*"> O'vfir-shyrf, «. An outer shirt. i'<. Jt n. To stretch too overetrain; rule a motion or a plea. o"ver-8lioe', o-yyi-shu', a. * adv. Over the top of a £"''• exaggerate. ver-8trew', 0-vsr-stru', He rai«!d K)me technical objections which the Court oi«rTu(erf "''"•-'; as, to be in mud o!;er»/ioe. " f<. To scatter or strew over. Macaulat vol. iv. o'ver-slioe", o'v(,r-slin-, ver-stra w't; o"ver-8lrow'{. England ch. 21, p. 544. [p. 8. « CO. '56.J «. A shoe worn over another- 9 in'lia-rubber felt; "'' '"'^°"''- 3. To rule over; sway or influence in adesired direction ,'"""'"y i"' or a galosh; an arctic. 2»ve?Ist*? ke't' m To Mr'ike ?,'.v!^'nrt or for desirc-d ends. o"ver-«I»oot', O-vfr-shat', v. I. (. I To shoot over . S^Ver-strln-w'jer-siriiigr, rrverigr-stringstrino^^- w* TV,' «rr«n™ ti,» <.tri„.« or p , rt. To arrange the strings I hcrfd tieyond, as a mark. 2. To go bevond- overKten- ev and I teach that there is a greneral and a special providence ^- of God which overrules human life by and through natural laws -- 3.Tos,^etUrflowsw|l^o&=c^. -- fy c .„.,„., .. ^v.^„„. „.^,.r H. W. BEKCHEa Statement, Providence p. 18. [F. * w.] a mill-wheel. 4t. To defeat; foil. 5t. To make drunk, t^r^X^P^^X^:-^"- — o"ver-struiisj:', O'vyr-strung', a. 1. Strung too tense- II. i. To hold 8wuy. II i. To shoot a missile or to tiy beyond the mark. ly; too sensitive. — o^vcr-ru'ler, //.— o^ver-ru'llng, pa. Ex- J:o overHlinot uiie- ercising controlling; jK)wer.— Mclf, to venture too far; as- A Btranffe unnatural cnerg-y was imparted to his muscular frame o"ver-rii'llng-ly, adv. by ni8 nerves overHtriing with >''ver-run', O'ver-run' sert too much. triunipn. v. I, t. 1. To run or spread Robertson Sermons thii-d Here ht'r ladvship otvrshot series, ser. xvii, p. 585. [H, 70.] over, especially so as to interfere with the proper condi- hernelf; she had nut colculaled 2. Having two sets of strings crossing obliquely. tion of; infest or ravage; »is, thistles orer/*«n the fieldn; well on the nature of the mind o'vor-Huiii"t, u. A surplus. mice overran the bouse. she wished to ensnare. o"ver-sway', O'vgr-sw^', vt. [Archaic] To exert Influ- Jane Porter Thaddeux feopled fir»t by the Ruthenian race, it [East Galicial has been of ence over; overrule. Warsaw ch. 23, p. 225. (p. overrun by Jews. « c.] ©"ver-awell't. vt. & vi. To overflow. "A. MbnibHbnib M. DowiEDowie Girl in the KarpathiansKarpathiane ch. p. 2. [o. P. '91.] o"ver-*hoot'injrt»o _ _ pa. Ex- 1, o'vert, O'vgrt. a. 1 . Open to view; outwardly manifest; 2. To run l>eyond; pass as a limit, either of space or ^^/^^^i^^v ^^„ in law, admitting of direct evidence. See covert. time; O'vcr-shet', as. he has overrun the mark; the vessel overran Men imajfine that they communicate their virtue or vice only by ;«7. 1. Surpassed in any her us'ial time; the river has overrun its banks. 3. overt actions, and do not see that virtue or vice emit a breath every way; as. to be ovej^s/iot in moment. Emkrson Figuratively, to exceed or go beyond (a just limit of any Essays in first aeries, p. 53. [H, H. * CO, '90.] games. 2. Operated by over- kind); outrun; as, his /^nV m^emtm his discretion. 4. 2. Iler. Opened, us a purse; outspread, as wings. 3+. shooting, as a mill-wheel. Print. To alter the arrangement of (composed types) by Ah Overshot Wheel. 0])en overhead. [Oy., pp. of ovnr, < L. operto, open; 3t. [Colloo.] Intoxicated. driving letters or words into another line, or lines into cp. cover', v.] — ov^^rniiot nlieel, a water-wheel for power, with another column or t>age-. done to make room for new Synonyms: manifest, open. See xoTORiors. — Anto- buckets tliHt arr tilled by water fi'oin a race over the top, the eontemplated, matter, or U} fill up gape caused by the removal or cor- nyms: hidden, Intended, meditated, pur- weight and Impetus of the water turning the wheel. posed, secret. «of«. firm, 98lc; at, f»re, ijccord; element, gr = over, 6ight, | = usoge; tin, machine, % = renew; obey, no; not, nor, atgm; fuU, rttie; but, bOm; able; » — —

overtake 1357 ovule

-market overt [En^.]. open, public market, wtiere ing, or the state of being overturned; overthrow; npset. the receptacles In which eggs, the sale of ^oods ^enerallv giveii tltle'lo the imrchase. even as of some crustaceans, are i. .\ subversion1 ordeetruction.or destruction. 3. [Scot.fAFScot.l A refrainrefrain. carried after extrusion from the ovary.— thoiigli the goods tie Btolen.— o.arl, In irlinlaal law. some- „«,._,. ,,,..„_, .,.,„>. »,«!„ o-viff'e-nous, '^' [Poet.] twine or rt. Producing eggs: said spcclllcally of the outer layer thing actuafiy done In execution of a erlinlnal Intent, as dis- " w,SJ,"hp\,"!;^ " 1.?;'*°'" • To of tlngiiished from """'"' ''\''^- the ovary, in which the ova develop.— o'vi-irerin, u. mere threats or words. The Constitution „/*„_,„ .. An ^e^-taip, ^ „ ovum.— o-vijr'er-oiiH, a. Same as oviferous.— of the United Slates ordains that there sliall be no conviction J;, a. Eke. Having the armature- o"vi- T*P^V posMl. ri. To lay an egg eggs: of treason unless on proof of the same overt act by at least ^"^ above the field-magnets to lessen magnetic leakage; or speclllcallv, In entomol- ogy, to deposit eggs two witnesses, or on confession in open court, thus preclu- said of a dynamo. by means of an ovipositor. —o"vi- " ~ o'vi-gac", n. The closed ding resort to inferential or constructive treason. o^ver-use', O'vgr-yfiz', r^ [Rare.] To use too much "Sr^L"'"""' 1 . capsule in which ova arc developed within the ovary; a Graafian vesi- "ver-lake', 0'vj;r-iek', t7. 1. To come up with by o'ver-use", O'ver-vOs', ». Excessive tise. cle. See Illus. under ovtjM. M, The Investment of an egg pursuing or following: catch; attain to or reach; as, iief- o'ver-val'ue, O'vcr-val'yil, r(. 1. To value beyond or eggs.— o^vl-sper'Hia-ry. I. a. Of or pertaining formauces worth; to sildom or*r((U< pnmiises. rate too high. 2t. To exceed in value. an ovotestls. II. n. An ovotestls.— o''vo-con'truni, n. A« j-ou nuinot overtake time, the tieet wav is to lie slwavg a few ©"ver-yaillf, C^'vgr-vfiU', vt. [Poet.] To vault over; form Bmbryol. Thecentrosome of theovum.— o"vo-coc'- niioiit«s befora him. W. HoNK EtvrwDdy Book, TabU Book ^^ *""h over. cus, ti. The nucleus of an ovum or germ-cell. — o'vo- vol. lii. pt. i. col. (cs. [T. r. -33.1 ©"ver-vell', CvgrvSI', rt. To envelop or cover with or eyle, n. Embriml. The unlmpregnatcd ovum — o"vo- Keu'e-gig, n. The 2. To take by surpi ise; come upon suddenly, as a tempta- 3^ with a veil. generation or production of an ovum. — o''vo.ge-net'ie, o-voK'e-noa». rt >i. tion. or as a fault, a crime, or its discovery or retribution. " ''''P""''"'' "'• tR»re.) To command a view —n^vn-gane, or^'\"eri^'k'' t.intiri/nl. One of the undifferentiated cells of the ovary Tber we^ which by division "'ver-'vi^'t. r,. An overlooking; Inspection. produce the ova.— o"vo-ka'ry-on, ii utmost peril. '";;^'S*''8'L^jGuSna^J'Il<-''2S''ft,/^?'"^ ' '^'"'- "^"•'»nS^nl hmbri/ol. The nucleus of the 7.- o"ver-vole', r.-y^r-yM'. rl. [Rare.] Toexceed In votes. unfecundau-d ovum.—o'vo- .Shefxirri p. 83. [c. ^.f.™A BBOfl. "w''57.] lein'mn, n. «>„vpr.»nlk', o-ver-wSk', rl. To walk over Embryol. The external envelope of the un- 3*. or upon. fecundated To overpower the senses of. o"Ter-Har't, rt. To defeat In war. ovum.- o-Toro-gy, n. Same as oology.— Synonyms: see catch. o'ver-wardt. drfr. Across. p'yo-plasiii, ». Embrijot. The protoplasm of the ovinn lieforc fecundation.- ©"ver-lu'ken*, p't. Made tipsy; Intoxicated. o"ver.H asli't, r<. To wash over; overflow. o"v»-pla8'ina, u. Yolk of eggs.— o^ver-laik'*, r. 1, t. To overcome o"vo-plas'liiic, rt n. Btol. or induce by talk. o'ver-waah"', O'ver-wesh", a. Geol. Carried by gla- — o"vo-les'tiH, .\ her- II, i. To talk too much. maphrodite sexual gland that produces both ova and sper- cier-streams over and beyond a frontal moraine, or matozoa. ©"ver-leemed'. O'ver-timd'.rt. [.\rchalc.] Exhausted by formed excessive by material so transported, as gravel or a plain. teeming or prmluclng. Cvl-bo-vl'na-, O'vi-bo-voi'nl or -vt'ne, n. i>l. Mam. o^ver-wa'tiled** a. Worn out; consuliled. o'ver-lhro**', fl-vtr-thrO', rl. 1. To throw over on A subfamily of BortUse, having a bovine aspect and ©"ver- watch', O'ver-wech', the side; tlirow down, especially by force or violence; r. I. f. 1. To watch to horns, and narrow molars excess. with supplementary tuber- u\m.'<: 2. To watch over. 3+. To wear out with cles; overturn: now usually (m'lv of large masses; as, musk-oxen. O'vl-bOH, ii. (t. L. ovis, „-ntehin<» To too g.) [< to ortrlhrow a wall. To overcome the power of; de- watch long. 2. o'vpi- »-n«'t ri feat; vanquish; specifically, of an established ruler or ^xy^fS^JLJ, - '^,"""' «'»'l^t''^.^vl°Mifc""Hmn"r™i.7*She^^^^^ i^[< L, n-ver"wl?'"w'*'l'*T>!i\er-wsr', ^^^f- » • . , rf. 1, To wear out: chietly ot-is, sheep. goveniment, to depose from power; subvert; , q -fc«<(o, kill. 1 revolution- in the " "- • -•- past participle. See ovkrwobn. To endure — II, ize; as. to ovtrthrow one's adversaries: to ortrlhrow a 2. O-vid'1-a o-vid'i.an, a. Of, pertaining to, or in the longer than; outwear; ontlive. iiiaiiner of the Latin king or a constitution. 3+. To dishearten. poetr Ovid..-,-.,(4,3 —B. C.^. to-„ A.,.. D. 1"),), whov A corrupt political . dealt largely Synonyms: demolish, destroy, level, overset, overturn, party . , may have lost or overworn its with the subject of love, and excelled in raze, principles. J. Bascok Sociology ch. 142. throw down. ups4*t. Bih^abolisu; baffle; conquxr; «. p. [g. p. p.], wit, fancy, lightness of touch, and metrical form. OKMoLISH; E,\TEK3(I.\ATE; Rl'IX. o'ver-wear", o'vgr-wSr-, n. Garments to lie worn over o'vl-duct, o-vit'er-oiis, etc. See ovi "» er-tliro«'er, «.— o'lrer-throw'tng t. the ordinary indoor clothing, as overcoats, wraps,vraps, etc « vi-fer, 0'vi-ft;r,. «. A- smasmall wire cage, upon a solid lift. Headlong; rash, "ver-wealh'er "«'*• <" carrying an egg safely. To damage or waste- byjy weatweather. [ < ovi- -f L. J'ero, bear.] „_ ...... - " " " o'ver-lhrow". O'ver-thrO', n. 1. The act of over- "ver-weeii't, r. To think too highly or conlldent- o'vl-forni", O'vi-fSrm, a. Haviaving the form of an egg throwing, rapeclally of oneself; think arrogantly or conceitedly, or or the state of t>eing overthrow-w-n- niin- sul)- '/l ovum; egg-slshaped. [< ovi- -f -form.] version. To n-nder conceited- o''Ter.H-een'cr+, ». 2. In cricket and baseball, a throw-hrow-inu of the J'-'' o'vl-form*. o Ovine. [ < L. ot't*, sheep, -form.] »"ver.ween'lnB, 0-ver-wIn'i..g, + ball over and beyond the player to it °sis " '''',,m. Characterizcni-— "^'j""" o'vlI(e,"'vi•» »«ii « Ovine. whom tK-ntntuwn. i,„ .„.,.„„„.;,„.",""' I •V'" [ < L. oritUt, < ovif, sheep.] •'J' P"*"™?'"""* PndePnde.or conceitconceit; "yP™"™?'"""* ; undulyself-conHdent;unduly self-conHdent o'ver-llirui»l'',0vsr-ihro8f, a. Otol. fharacterizedfharacteriied ; o-vfo-vl'inw, o-varnio-vaVnl or -wl'nf, n. p(. Jfrtm. A subfamily of '"^^'^"tng"'^^rmnmrtg ambition.-ambition.— ISnrl.JInrlilie. lyplBed hy the sheep.' by.,. ,„or u^i.M.K.i.gbelonginging toI., earnerearlier andaim originally lower Stratastrata, KT"*?"'KTl^?^,'' t' o'ver-ween'- generally united with 'Cn' ""K-'y- <«'''— •'Ter-ween'Ing-neB*, n. )'>">*•. higher strata. See illus under rAULT. Overconlldeiice; presumption. vl-iia'llon, O'vi-nf'shnn, n. Inoculation o'ver-lhrunl'. «. (iaM. " ver-weiKh',_ p-ygr-wS',. -.-.-_,rf. To exceed__ceed in wweight;' of sheep Same3«THBC8T,thrust. with ovine virus outw-eigh ; overbalance. to avoid sheep-pox. [< L. orif, sheep.] o'vrr-ihwarl'. (•vfrthw-Srf, of. [Archaic] 1, To lie "ver-wolglit', "'"'?**•"'*'"'<-'• «>'™'". *'• '^- '*'••) Per- athwart. 2. To cross;„. opiMjee.,, _ ..O'ver-wft;,_ rt. To put^_. too much (xm). I. a, taiiiing to o'ver-ihwapf*. rt. 1.' Situated over against: opposite, "eight u|s)n; also, to iJverbalance or w-eig"!! tlown. the Ori««,- sheep-like, II. n. One of the 2. IWIng cr.aswlm-; transverse. 3. Crossing at right an- o'ver-wclKht", O'ver-wSf, n. 1. Excess of weight Orins. gies < ontrary: o-vip'a rci, 4. pcn-erBe.-»''ycr'thwari'Iy+, ailr. as beyond the legal or customary amount; as, to give »-v>P'a-ra, n. i>l. Zool. Animals that lay eggs."-- IX. miparvji; "'^''5$"^ preponderance, t<" ' ' " see oviparous.] .'y."rr^«V'rn'»t?„"'irA"u„.rtlng circnnuunce. ?• 'i™^'^ ' - 2. ' ip'a-rous, ovi(>'a-rus^ <'tntrHdlotlon; nppo«ltluo. o^^-^^'iV,, uO'vvcrwel, r<. mart'.] to well or flow over. a. Protiucing eggs or ova o'^ver-wlielm^ O'ver-hwelm', that mature and are natched outside the b«ly. »''vrr-thwftrt't, mir. 1, From nlde t; cover comnlelcly; flow over an *i, outraKi'ously. o'^Ter-tweri't, m to submerge: ewallow Viviparous creatures are a kind of Biiecie-paying lot. but up. or/i>- i^ver-lbwart'. $*rep. (Archaic] 1. From aide to side 88 with a wave, flood, or the like; entrulf. a. To aroua ones only ^ve their notes, as it were, for a future brood. f; »-roM; Athwart. crush with wndden or irresistible oiwet; oppress beyond Holmes Elsif Vetiner ch. 4. p. 64. [n. M. A CO. '87.] ThfD I ehoae to alaad anckr a main bmn. that la/ eodurance; overpower, ovrrtkwart as with grief, tare, or debt; also. [< LL. oriparm, < L. orum, egg, paiio, produce.] >>•- KieepI*. Bt'lTTAX Omce Atmunding p. SS. [b. o. a CO.] to overcome with effusiveness or profusion. + — ©"vl-par'I-ty, n. The condition of being ovip- 'i, ODttieottiertldeof. Channr wrote tnach. He amaiM ot by hiii variety, and otvr- arous. — o-vlp'a-roua-Ir, arfi. — o-vlp'a-rong- While (kr beTond. and overthwart the ctMun . . . •MWmj a* with bii wealth. D. H. Whkeuch Bv'Ways of Liter- ness. H. Ovlparity. Tb« tktplair faod recede* tato Um rlondr aturt efa. 7. p. 135. [r. * w. *SS,] Oowraa Tatk bk. 1, 1. IW. ©"vl-pos'l-lor, o"-vi-pez'i-t9r, n. The tubular organ 3+. To stir or toss up. 4t. To overhang or 3. In front of; over against. overlook at the extremity of the abdomen, as in many insects, by •^ver*ivveri'^. 5+. To place over something, o'Ter-llde'',n'v(;r-i.,..„„ or„. that,k., -',Y.«.-?5f . "' „'vl«m, O'vizm, n. The theory that all existing forms o'ver-llnic", adv. Beyond the stipulatol time. wtiich overwhelm!!....„.-,„„ ",' " *'5'^'™ P"*xi8ted in the nrimordial egg of tTial spe- -"ver-liroe'lyt. (I. Too early; premature. t-er-n-liplni'i'ng, 0-vcr-hwelm'ing, pa. Crushing L- »':"•"• pled^, 'f. Intoxicated. with fone. weight, .Tr'numfcrs; irresistib™ overoower^ t <, «gg-T '''™„?,!:to yiai,'«<'*'"=«=,>'T:n. A believer in ovism ; too high title to. ing; as, an rtre/-rtA'/Hii//i. o'vold, n. An egg-shaped Ixxly. .\ harmonic: so o"ver.wlng',r(. 1. [Poet. J ToBylieyonil. it. Tooutilank [ < L. ot^i/wi, egg, + calle >•'• o'ver-lop', o-vvr-i»p-, r. I. f. 1 . To mount aliove To outwit. ter-round; in Roman architecture, a quarter of a t^rcle '*''"'"''!'• ' - ' i the top of; tower over; top; a«, a peak OKrtowBfnu the '''; '''""J"!"" in profile: in Greek, hyperbolic,^ ... with a iiuirk at the top. ".*•'•'*;",!*•''*';'•*•''''"X*''''"*"'"'".''^! r.-st. a. Ileiice. to excewf in eminence; auruMit; Mctl. '^- *•'• 1. To impose See illus. under Coiuntiiian. [It., < LL. oruliim, dim. 3*. To set at imughl; override. • too much labor upon; demand results from beyonii the of L. »rt/m, egg.] pow-er or caiiacity of; exhaust with work; II*. i. To rise above otbere; tower. as, to orer- o^vo-vl-vlp'a-rons, O'vo-vi-vip'a-rus, W. (vai-vip'-e, '.-- <: . o"**"; toocuTKW* an areumenl, " - " , . . . o"»ep.|o«-'er. O'vtrtau'er. I. f. To tower over- '"f* 2. To work or o-rus, C. /.)," a. Producing eggs that are inculiatcd and ' '•"'oorate the surface of. overtop. II. i. To soar too high 3. [Rare.] To fill too full, aa hatched within the i)arent'B IxkIv, as some reptiles and "l">,l«ho_r; as. life o'ver-lrade', O-ver-lred', ri. To trade beyond one's a ot»r«CTWjA< with tasks. fishes: fonncrly applied also to tlie marsupials and nion- '• • apital: purchase uootiB beyond the means of payment, ,"• ^" '*" ^°" severe y. otremes. [< ovo- -f viviPAKot's.j - ^ beyond lilt reqnlrementa of the market €>'vep-wopk'', O'ver-wurk', n. I, Work done in — o''vo-vlv''l-par'l-ty, n. ovcilime or in "ver-lra'dlnc, n. excess of the stipulat'. A'vfr-trip' To trip over. nausted, as oy tt)ll. Protozoans resembling an ovum or cell. [< LL. t>vu- "vpr-l row ', rl. To put tisi much faith In Behold the man that loved and lost. But all he wuis oerneom. httn; see ovoi-O.]— O^VII-la'rl-an, 'ver-lruHl', ('virtruif, rt. it ri. I.\rchalc.| a & n Tkkhysou i. /a Memorlam «i. I. o'v ii-latp, O'viu-lSt, vl. toofar.— o'vpr-lruist', n. Kxcesslve trust. [-la'ted: -la'tino.]j To pro- «i ii- . i. t ..^ , j , , ,,, _ ""' ""e; o'vep-lurp, O'virchurorO'vsrt-ynr rl l-TtRED- -ti-r- * " ^ °™ "J woni threadbare; trite; stale, duce ovules or ova and discharge them; lay eggs 3*- P"^' or spent, as time. o'vu-Iale, O'viu-let -lyt, ixu] A«-/. To address an overture to; a«, the Assembly " w n. Ovuliferous. o«r(«r«/ the presbyteries on a nvision of the creed. vii-la'llon.O'vin le'8hun, n. The formation and dis- S-^JJI^ii^L,' ?'-„^%*7rSU,'a. hl'wn''.^iii^^^^^^ o'ver-lurp, .V,u. An insirnimntal prelude ^^ charge of ova; the iH*ri rn" a leiitativeI ;V '"'""""V"propiwal; any offer or sng- is normally invest- elaborate- overdone 4 Workeil too hnnl • overworU-.K gestion inU'ndc^ asai. intro,llncll,m ed with two mem- to further »W.tia- „-;„:,.Ur'Sr'.l-. Ttl kec"p ofcJnVr""^ iKiii- To™ erS a«, ftr^riurt* of |>eace. 3. Kcd. In the Pn«*by- with ycHra; rkp. brancu (the pri-

' linrrh, iniue the the process of beginning legiittation lii, o'ver-'yenr", ovi*r-yIr*. a. [Prov. Eng.] Kept over from and ttecundine) t formal proposition from presbyl4Tlef* to the tin- pnredlriic year; as. orcryear twu-on. and contains the nucleus or y, or from the Asst?ml)ly u> presbyteries, inviting o'ver-yenr'^t "''p. Over the year; fr(nn year to year. nucellus. In Hhai>e ovules 4' ' I*«"ved- from-- Ijitin >uU>^iiieiit thereon; sUm*, the pntposal itself. IHarel*^*'"' - orttm, an egg: combining may l)e atropons. orthotro- uifwjrwiire; - • <*y."-' " ,^n«' An ovisac or IKMiH. campylotro|)ous, A diwovery St. An open place; an aixr- * am- *^ "^ * OraaflanIj'^"^?---:"''**-^''!*'""**''follfcle. tnre. (OK., < ottri; see overt.^ ' — o'^vl-cHD'HU-lnr. w.— o'vl-eell'', phitropouK, etc. 2. A small «. An iKPcliim.— Various Srnonyraa: aee proposal. o^^vix-el-liiter-ous, ]yzoan.' n'^vi-celMu-lnr, '/. Of or pertain- tivules. ©"ver-lurn', O'ver-tOm'. r. I. t. 1. To throw from fertilized. ing to an ovicell.—u-vie'u-lnr. '/. Of orperialnliiKloan — . 1. Its \t . , , . Oilhotropoiifl or atropons haw; cause to fall; npst't; to chair. IS as. merUnn a egir.— o*vir'u-luiil. >i. l-i.i, pl.\ Arch. A «malT egg- Man developed from an an oviileanJacross-seotion.shoM- 2. To flcfltroy m;ilr. about the l^tlv rtf an inch the power or the coneititutlim of; subvert; Khaped ornament.- o'vi-cy»*t, n. Am-Ul. An Incubatory ,„-, i„^„ ami ouUt coals. 3. Cam- in diameter, overtiin»w; as, to ortrlurti a fVHtem, a ruler, or an argu- pouch conBlHllng uf a dlvrrttculum of the atrlnm.— o"vl- wlnclnliff,-™ in no p,1„|rc.pou«- ovule and section, respect from the oru/.;« (if other ment. 3. [Archaic] oveJ-jwwer; cya'lic, «.— o^vl-diiVal, If. (o'vUdirVa-l, C). a. J. Amplitropous -ovule and sec- To overwhelm. animals. UaBwin /*-»ce»( o/ <»f. j>ertHlnIng to, or of the of ,i„„. ». Anatropous- ovule and II. i. To Itim over: nature an oviduct, o'^vl- capsize; u{M*et. Uan pt. 1, ch. I, p. ». [A. KI.j du'cenlt.— t>. section, o. I'endulous-a section. Smonyms: wtr hkmolihh; ^ivehtiirow, o'vi-ducl. Anut. The paBnagcby which the ova Hre convcyi-d from the ovary to the iiteruB or to the [F., < LL. oculurn; see • H'""'"?"'*' -•'*<*'''"-'• Er»ct - o''ver-turii'a-bl(e, rt.-o^^^r-lupn'er. n. -a«^tion. exterior of ananjnml, as the KaUoptan tnln- of a mammal. OV-OI.O.I o'vop-iurn", r/vvr tfini', n. I. The act of overluni- o*vll'er-oiiM, '/. tool. Bwirlng or holding ckkh: wild of ~u''vu«lif'pr-ous. ^. Bearing ovules, o'^vu-liff'*

i = o«t; 9U; IQ = f«iid, = future; « = k; ctaureb; db = (Ae; jjo, unc, Hik; aoj thin; = azure; If «h F. bo*, dttne. <,/rom; i, ob»olete; X, vananl. !

Ovulidae 1358 oxeye

•(•—•^•lltet n. A fossil egg, or a fossil resem- or habits; grave- or solemn-loolcing; stupid or obtuse; compound (CallftNaOa) obtained Ijy the action of am- also, night-prowling.— owl'ish-ness, w. monmm hydroxid on alloxan. [Trans, from alloxan.] t^Tull-oie, o-vift'li-dt or -vQ'li-dd, n. jU. Conch. The owl'Isni, aul'izm, n. 1. A predatory disposition. 2. ox"a-laii'tlii, ex'o-lan'tin, n. Chem. A white crys- AmpMpenmdse. [< Ovulum.] [Rare.] Owlish stupidity. talline compound (CfllIflN40B) formed bv reducing allox- — o'vu-lld, n.— o'Tn-lln(e, o'vu-Iold, a. owFt, aul'i, rt. 1, Owl-like in respect of sight; pur- anic acid with zinc and aqueous hydrochloric acid. •^-list* O'vla-llst, n. Sanie as ovist. blind. 2. [Slang.] Stupid; dull. ox'a-Iate, ex'a-let. n. CfLem. A salt of oxalic acid. o'via-Ium, n. 1. [-la,7>/.] An ovule. 2. o'Ta-laiii» own^f On, vt. 1. To have the legal or rightful title to; ox"a-lat'ic, ex'a-lat'ic, a. Med. Of or pertaining to [0-] A geuus typical of Om/Hdse. [LL.; see ovolo.] have the exclusive right of possession anuuse of; be the oxalates.— oxalatlc diathesis, the condition of the sys- , nucleated o'Tuni.O'vmn, n. [o'va, ;>/.] [L.] 1 5io/. A proprietor of; liold or possess by right; possess; have; tem that favors secretion of oxalates from the urine. cell, in the ovary of n. Chem. Same as glyoxal. formed as, to own a horse. ox-aPde-hyde, female, that produce ox'^al-e'iiil-a, ex"al-I'mi-a or -e'mi-a, n. Med. An the may Unlike the Greek, who, not oicning himself, was owned by his of oxalic acid or of its a new individual by a proc- city, the Englishman is not in any appreciable degree oioned by excess salts in the blood. [ < ox- ess of g^e^meutation, usually his nation, but in a very positive way oums himself. alic + Gr. haima, blood.] ox''al-ee'ml-a^. Spencer Principles Ethics vol. ii, ch. 253. [a. 'W.] after impregnation; an egg, of 29, p. ox"al-etli'y l-I u, I ex'al-eth'il-in, -in or -In, n. Chem. ^

widest wnse. . Arch, 2. To claim as one's own; respond to; as, to own the ox"'al-ctli'y'l-liie, A colorless aromatic liquid com- in the 3 j f An e^-shaped ornament, name ''American." [< AB.dgnian, K^gen; seeowN,a.] pound (C'^IIjo^a)(C'fllljoNa) formed by the action of ethyl bromid see possess. "< o\«s o\vd, ownd. Owe, : Synonyms: on methyl-glyoxalin. [< oxalic 4- ethyl.] nietb''- owed, owned. Phil. Soc. owrii'', V. 1, t. 1, To admit or confess to be true or ow, au, interj. Expressive in accordance with fact, especially when to one's disad- ox-al'lc, ex-al'ic, a. Chem. Of, pertaining to, or de- of t^urprise and pain, or vantage; acknowledge; concede; confess; as, to own a rived from the oxalis or sorrel. sometimes of other excited fault. 2. To acknowledge to belong to; avow or admit — oxalic acid, a white crystalline poisonous compound feeling. the ownership of; recognize; as, to own him for a son. (HjCaO^) found extensively In the vegetable kingdom and made artificially In various ways, as by decomposing sugar •w'betf n. Same as orBir. I shall not oim Waverley; my chief reason is, that it would pre- with nitric add. It Is largely used In the arts, as In oleach* •wchtv n. Same as orcH. Ovum. vent me of the pleasure of writing again. Jng In dyeing, and Is sometimes called salt lemons. •wd, Od.a. [Dial.. Yorkshire. The haman ovum in the ova- Scott in Lockhart's Walter Scott ch. 11, p. 254. [F. w. & CO.] and qf 1. of the ovary. Many substances, besides en^ar, yield oxalic acid by the action Eng.] Old. ry. Parenchyma II. i. [Colloq.] To make admission: with to. 2. Ovisac, surrounded by the of nitric acid; as molasses, rice, potato starch, gum, wool, hair, Bot I me&ns far to ma&ke '{« owd tibrous tnnic and by blood'ves- Grant I'm a beast, why, beasts must lead beasts' lives silk, and many vegretable acids. U. S. Dispensatory 16th ed., p.9L »ftfe AS **ppy ae iver I can. Fluid interior of Suppose I oien at once to tail and claws. """'Oirrf Roa, st. 2. 3. filUnff Tbknyson — — — Browning Bishop Blougrani^s Apology st. 18. Ox-al"i-da'ce-«e, ex-al'i-de'se-I or -dg'ce-e, n. pi. ' "•""i"" ' . . jj^^ ovisac. 4. Cumulus, or pro- f [owed (formerly Bot. An order of plants — the sorrel family — now usually OWe, 0, . ligerous disk, surrounding (5) [< AS. unnan, give.] OUGHT or own); OW'ING.J the ovum, composed of (6) vitel- Synonyms: see acknowledge; avow; confess. regarded as a trioe {Oxalidese) of the geranium family I. ^ 1. To be indebted to line membrane, (7) vitellua, (8) — to own up. to make confession of. (Geraniacese). [< Oxalis.] nucleus, and ifl) nucleolus. Com- ox'a*lint ox'^a^line, 71. Chem. Same as olyoxalin. the extent of; be under ob- own., a. 1. Belonging to oneself ; peculiar; particular; pare .llus. under gebm-layer, ligation for; be obliged or individual: following the possessive (usually a possessive Ox'a-lls, ex'a-lis, n. Bot, 1. A large widely distrib- uted genus of mostly stemless herbs of the geranium bound to pay : with to, express or implied, before the per- pronoun) as an intensive to express ownership, interest, son or thing to whom the debt or obligation is due; as, or individual peculiarity with emphasis, or to indicate family {Geraniacese), with mainly radical, long-petioled, I owe you an apology; to owe ten dollars. 2. To be the exclusion of others; as, my own horse; his own usually palmately trlfoliolat« leaves, dnd axillary or rad- obliged or indebted for; have to ascribe, trace, or ac- idea; it is my own: in this sense often with ellipsis of ical one* or several -flowered petiuncles with handsome knowledge as due: with to. the noun; as, to enjoy oner's mvn (property). yellow, rose, or white flowers. They are prized in orna- mental cultivation. 0. stricta and 0. are the No conntn' seems to owe more to its women than America does, Thou know'st that in such matters I must follow Acetmella nor to oioe to them so much of what is best in social institutions My own light, not another's. common wood-eorrels of the United States. See illus. and in the beliefs that govern condnct. Schiller The Plccolomini tr. by Coleridge, act iii, sc. 1. under obcobdate. 2. [o-] A plant of this genus. [< Bbtck Am. Commonwealth vol. ii, ch. 105, p. 598. [macs. '89.] 2. Being of the highest degree; actual; real: with to L. oralis, < Or. oxalis, < oxys, sharp, sour.] 3t. To be the owner of ; have. own; before the possessor; as, own cousin to A. 3, Intimate- ox'a-lite, ex'a-lalt, n. Mineral. Same as humboldtink. t. be indebted [< OXALIC] II. To or in debt. [< AS. d.gan, have.] ly related or enshrined in the affections: used as a term ow^'elt, rt. Law. Equal. ox''al-ur-am'id(e, 71. Chem. Same as oxalanI [< ox* of endearment, sometimes in the superlative; as, myowj/i- ow'el-ty, O'el-ti, n. Equality: obsolete except in legal ALURIO -4- AMID, AMIDE.] est own. 4. Strikingly similar: after a possessive; as. phrases. [< OF. oelte, equality.] o'vel-ty$, ox'^al-u'rate, ox'ftl-Q'rSt, n. Chem. A.salt of oxaln- Tommy is his father's own son. [ < AS. agen., orig. — owelty of {Eng. Law), the difference pp. ric acid. partition of paid by one coparcener to another to equalize a partition.— agan.^ owe.]~of one's own motion, spontaneously; ox"al-u'rl-a, ex'ftl-fi'ri-a, n. Pathol. Excess of cal- without being prompted from without. o. ofserTices (Feudal Law), equality of services In sub- —to be one's cium oxalate in the urine. < oxalic -|- Gr. ouron, urine.] ow^nt* to be master of oneself. [ ordinate tenures, as where those of the terre-tenant and the ox"al-u'rIc, ex'al-fi'ric, a. Chem. Of. pertaining to, mesne tenant, respectively, were the same. oivn'er, Oo'er, n. One who owns or has the legal title; or derived from alloxan and uric acid. < oxalic ukic.J O'en-ait, disciple the the rightful proprietor; also, one who has possession. [ + Ow'cii-Ue. n. A of Robert Owen, oxaluricacid, a white crystalline compound (C.sH4N9 see master. — English socialist and philantliropist (1771-1858), who at- Synonyms: O4) found in combination with ammonia In urine, or formed tempted to reorganize society on a basis of humanitarian OAvn'er-less, On'gr-les, a. Having no owner. directly by heatlnj^ parabanic acid with aqueous alkalis. on'gr-ship, n. state and socialistic cooperation. Ow'en-lst^. o^vn'er-sUlp, The of being a pro- ox'al-yl(e,ex'al-ir, ?i. Chem, 1. The nvpotlietical rad- prietor or owner; exclusive right of possession; pro- ow'er, O'er, n. One who owes. ical (C2H2) of oxalic acid. 2. Formerly, same as (1) prietorship. ow'er, ou'ijr, adv. &prep. [Scot.] Same aa over. CABBONYL and (2) CABBOXYL. [< OXAI.IC + -YL.J ow'er-by, uu'er-bl, adv. TScot.] Same as overby. It is doubtful whether any high degree of civilization is possible ox-am'lc, ex-am'ic, a. Chem. Pertaining to or derived ow'erifiid", uu'er-end', a. End-over-end. without individual oi land. [Scot.] ownership J. Q. Smith in House Ex. from oxalic acid and ammonia. [< oxalic amin.] oner'loup, aur'laup, n. [Scot.] leaping over. Doc, Rep. on Indian Affairs, Oct. so, '76 387. [gov. ptg. off.] + 1, A 2, p. acid, a white crystalline compound (C-Ha A trespafts of cattle. The stream-tide at the change of — oxninic 3. Synonyms: see property. formed variously, as by boiling oxamid with aqueous the moon. [E.] NO3) oivn'ness, On'nes, 7i. Individuality. ammonia. ower'«"ord, aur'wCrd, n. [Scot.] The burden of a song. own'sroot", On'-rQt', a. Grown on its own root; not — W. C. Chem. o'wlier''t. adv. Anywhere, o'^vnere^'t. ox-nni'ate, (ox'a-mate, /.), n. A budded or grafted; as, rose. salt of oxamic acid. ox"ani-etn'ane, ?i. Chem. A o%vkt ouk, n. [Scot.] A week. oukt. an own^root — ow'rance, au'rans, n. [Scot.] Ability; superiority. white crystalline compound (C+HjNOa) made by passing dry owl, uul, vt. [Eng ] To carry on an Illegal or contraband ammonia-gas through dry ethyllc oxalate till It aolldifles. trade; smuggle; especially, to carry wool or sheep out of owret» n. The aurochs. eth'''yliOX-ain'ateJ.— ox"ani-etli'yI-ane, n. Chem. England: at one time Illegal.— ow^l'ert, n. owre'ship", aur'-hlp", K. [Scot.] A way of striking a blow with a hammer swung from the hip. A nacreous or pearly crystalline compound (CsHeNOg) o'wlt n. 1 . A raptorial bird having the eyes directed owsett n. Ooze, ows'ert.- ows'ellt* n. A quagmire. formed by saturating fused mi'thyl oxalate with dry ain- forward; one of the Stri- o^vs'^en, Qus'n, n.pl. [Scot. & North. Eng.] Oxen. monla-gas. inetli"'ybox-ain'atet* ge»„ as a barn-owl or / ex-am'id, -id -aid, n. white And he had owsen, sheep and kye. Burns Bonnie Jean st. 4. ox-am'ld, or Chem. A etricrid, or a bubonid. adv. Out. ox-am^ide, T compound, CO(NH2),CO(NH»), formed va- Owls are mostly nocturnal. owtt, owtet. riously, as by heating ammonium oxalate. [ oxalic They have ox, ex, n. fox' EN, pl.^ 1. An adult castrated male of < -f- a shorthead with AMiD, amide.] a more or less complete cir- a domestic bovine quadruped; also, in the plural, domes- cular or triangular facial tic bovine quadrupeds of either sex. Compare cattle. ox-ani'1-dtn, ) ex-am'i-din, -din or -din, n. Chem. A disk of radiating feathers, 2, A ix>vine quadruped, as a buffalo, bison, or yak; spe- ox-ain^i-dliie, (crystalline organic compound, C(NH) large eyes and ears, and the cifically, one of the taurine group, as the common do- (NH2),C(NH)(NH3), known chiefly by its salts. [< outer toe reversible. The mesticated Bos taurus., or the zebu or Indian ox {Bos in- OXYGEN H- AMIDIN^, AMIDINE*.] flight Is noiseless, owing to ox-am'iiilte, ox-am'ait, n. Mineral. A silkv, white, the soft, lax plumage. dicus). [< AS. oxa., ox, < y uk^h., sprinkle.] transparent, hydrous ammonium oxalate (H4(XH4)2C2 %, One of a breed of do- Oompounds, etc. :— ox'san'^te-lope, n. A buballne antelope.— oxsbalin. n. Same as horse-balm.— crystallizing in the orthorhombic system. ox- mestic pigeons having an oxsbi- Ofl), [< ter, 71. 1, A bird, the oxpecker. *J, [Local, U. S.] The alic owl-like -f- ammonia.] bead and a prom- cowhird.— ox=bot, n. A hot'Sy (Hvpod^rma bovifi), OTita ox''an-ll-ani'id, * ex"an-il-am'id, -id or -aid. n. inent frill. 3. A person larva, found under the skin of cattle, ox'^an-il-aiii^lde, \ Chem. A snow-white, crystalline, accustomed to be up late etc. — oxsbow, n. 1, A bent piece flaxy compound (CgHaNaOa) obtained by decomposing at night; a night-owl. of wood In an ox-yoke, that forms a collar for the ox. See illus. below. cyanilin with hydrochloric acid. [< oxanilic + amid, VauirelM . . . was sumamed In river re- AMIDE.] plie'''nyl-ox-aiii'idt< the Oiel, from his beinK 2. [New Eng,] A bend a sembling such a bow In form.— oxi ex-an'i-let, n. salt of oxanilic acid. obttgredto . . . venture out only ox-an'i-late, A bj nj^t, through fear of bis brake, n. A stall In which oxen are ox"aii-H'lc, ex'an-il'ic, a. Pertaining to or derived placed to be shod,- oxscheek, n. creditors. OOLJDSinTH Works from oxalic acid and anilin. [< oxalic + anilis.] vol. iii, letter Jowl. — ox:eyed, a. Having large, Uzxiv, p. 815. oxanilic acid, a crystalline compound (CgHrNOg) [bell '8i.] calm eyes like those of an ox: a Ho- formed by^ heating„ dehydrated^ oxalic acid with'Ith anaullin at meric epithet; as, rja;-ewerf [< AS. me.\ Juno.— ox'- xhpmeux-ooi.Av.hrtt 140° The European Tawny Owl Aca{tle-falr.-ox*fence, C. for an hour, pheiiyloxaiiiic acid}:. Oompounds, etc. fairn,n. :—an / ex-an'i-lid, -lidor-laid, ti. nearly crj'S- iSprnium aluco). Vi5 n. [Eng.] In fox-hunting, a combination fence consisting ox-an'i-lld, A owl in an ivyabuMht* a ox-aii'1-lide, Ctalline compound (CgHgOsNa) formed stupid blunderer.— owl'sbut'ter-fly",n. ASouth-Amerl- of a railing, hedge, and ditch. Called also oxer.— oxsfly, n. The ox-hot.— oxsfoot, «. The split hoof of a horse's by heating anilin oxalate at 170° C. [< oxalic -f anilin can nymphalld butti;rfly ( Caligo eurplochus), about9 inches hind foot.— n. gall of the ox, especially -4- In expanse, with large ocelli on the folded wings compared oxsirall, The as AMID, amide.] dipbenyl oxanildt. prepared for use in water-coJor or crayon painting. to owlB* eyes.— owlseyed, a. Having eyes like an owl; ox'taaiie", ex'ben", n. The Cape poison-bulb. parfollod. owl'y!eyed"t.— owl=faced,«.— owI«8fnat, OX'Qall is an excellent and delicate cleansing; aeent. It is a ox'abird",ex'-bfird',n. l.Theduulin. 2. [Local, Eng.] " liquid soda soap. YoDMANS Hand*book of Household Science n^ A small psvchodid fly.— owl'liead", ?i. (Local,X^[Local, U S.] The sanderling. 3. An oxpecker. 4. An African ' * " 1 796, p. 430. [a. '66.] The black-belliediUlr plover.— owlilight, n. Twilight; dusk. weaver-bird Textor alector). — oxshead, n. 1, An ox's head. 2t. A blockhead. ( — owbmonkey, 71. Adouroucoull.— owUmotli, 7i. A ox'»cheek"', etc. See ox. Brazilian noctuld moth ( Erebus strix), about h foot In ex- — oxihide, n. 1, An ox's hide. 2. A hide of land. See ox-e'a, ex-f'a or -e'o, n. Spong. A rod-shaped spicule panse. —owlsparrot, n. The kakapo. See Illus. under inuE3, 71.— oxsland. n. Old Eng. Law. As much land pointed at both ends. See illus. under spicule. [ < Gr. KAKAPO.— owl*swalloiv, n. A podargold bird.— owl* as can be cultivated t)y the aid of an ox, averaging about train* n. [CoHoq.] Any railway-train that rims late at 15 acres. ox'ifauir''t; ox'gate"i.~ox'pith"t, n. aceifl, f. of oxys, sharp.] nixht. Marrow. — oxsray, n. A very large ray (DicerobatiH ox-e'ate, ox-t'et or -gt, a. 1. Having the form of an •wlf n. [Dial.] Same as wool. ftlorna) of the southern European coasts, sometimes 20 feet oxea. 2. Pointed at one end; needle-shaped. ong and 28 feet broad, with a horn-IIke projection from owrI'er-y» aul'er-i, n. [-ies, n^.] 1 . An owl-like char- ox'en, ex'n, n. Plural of ox. each pectoral fin.- oxsreim, 7i. [Cape Colony.] A strip acteristic, act, or utterance. 2. A place where owls live. ox'eye", ex'ai', ji. 1 . Bot. Any one of several plants of ox-hlde used for a halter, strap, or the like.— ox'- oivl'et, aul'et, n. small ae, of various genera of the aster family (("om;>wf*^a?). Es- 1, A owl; the European skln^'t, 7i. A hide of land.— ox*80le, n. [Ir.l A flatfish, owlet (Athene noctua). 2. A young owl. the whiff.— ox: wiirbic, n. An ox-hot.— to nave tbe pecially: (]) [U. S.] Heliopsi^ Iwris, a tall perennial with That is but the owl and owlet. Talking in their native language. black ox ti'eiid on one*s foot* to know the meaning opposite, triple-ribbed, serrate, ix'tioled leaves, and showy Ixjnofellow Hiawatha pt. iii, st. 15. of sorrow or mlsfortuni-. peduncled, terminal, yellow heads of flowers. (2) fEng.] 3. An owlet-moth. The following are some of the self- Any species of linphthalmifm, with large yellow heads: owl'et'moth^''. aul'et-mSth', n. One of various noc- explaining compounds that have also been common in English gardens. 2. One of various birds. tuld mottis, as of the genus Prodenia. used: ox^ffoad* oxslike, ox- man* oxiHhoe, oxfStallt (1) The black-bellied plover. (2) The dunlin. (3) [Prov. Oirl'slasa^t, n. wag, or, according oxi A to some, either of team, oxsyoke. Eng.] A titmouse; as, the big oxeye {Pa?'us major) and two, father and son, whose pranks and practical jokes were ox"ac'lcl, ex'as'id, W. Wr. (ex'- An Ox-yoke with two blue oxeye (P. cxruleus). 3. A sparoid flsh, the bogue. related fn a medieval German tale, translated Into many lan- Ox-bows, [Austral.] elopoid fish cuprinoides) guages: the English translation of the Gunnan EuleJispie- afl-id C. I.), n. Chem. An acid that 4. An {Megalops get. Owl'Hpie'^tflet. contains oxygen, as sulfuric acid (H2SO4): distinguished resembling the tarpon. 5. A small storm-cloud some- •wl'inirt, n. Old Kiuf. Imw, The offense of exporting from hydracid. acid.] times seen on the African coast: a sailors' name. 6. [< oxygen + " wool or sheep from the kingdom. ox'''al-amMd, -ide, n. Chem. Same as oxahid. pl. Small concave mirrors made at Nurembei^. [C] 7. owl^lslit aul'ish, a. Rambling an owl in appearance ox'a-Ian, ex'a-lon, n. Chem, A white cryatalline An oval dormer-window.

Bofa, Arm, Qsk; at, fare, ^(ccord; ov«r, el^mfint, ^r = eight, % = OMge; tin, machine, J = r^ew; obey, d5; not, nor, at^m; full, rikle; bvt, bdm; aisle; ^

ox-eyed 125d oyapock

— creeiepinff oxeye, hothouse plant (Wedelia car- ox'ter, ex'ter, vt. [Scot.] 1. To hug with the arms. 2. prolonged forward. Including Calappidae, Leucositdse, etc. no»a) wltlItn .yellow flowers, from the West Indies.— o. To support by taking the arm. — ox'''y-stoin'a-tous, ox''^y-8to'uiou8, a.— ox'y. daisy* an erect, simple, or ox'ter, H. [Prov. Eng. & Scot.] 1, The armpit. 2. A hug slome, 7i.— ox"y-str«n'gy. Spong. A stron- few-branched perennial herb with the amis. fylous spicule sharp at both ends ox"y-8troD'gy- (CAry«antA«/;it(m Leucanthe- ox'*tongue", ex'-ttrag", n. The tongue of an ox. ous, a.— ox"y-»*ul'fid. ox"y-«ul'fide, «. Chem. 'A Leucanlhemum vut- compound of a sulfld with an o.\id, as a sulfid In which mum or ox'longue", n. 1, Any one of various plants having gare) with lanceolate-oblong part of the sulfur lias been replaced by oxygen. ox"y- rough tongue-shaped leaves, as the English alkanet. 2. leavea and a large solitary sul'phid(et.— ox"y-8ul'fu-ret, n. Chem,. Same aa fioweT'head with yellow disk Any one of various short broadswords. oxysulfid: a disused term.- ox"y-tet'rnct. n. Spong. and white rays: an Old World ox'swar^ble, etc. See ox. An oxyaster with 4 rays.— ox"y-to'ci-a, n. Obstet. Un- plant naturalized In the I'nlted ox'yi, ex'l, a. [Rare.] Pertaining to or like an ox; boiine. usual rapidity of parturition.— ox"y-toc'ic. a. Bringing States. Though Ibe flower Is ox'y*, a. [Prov. Eng.] Wet, soft, and spongy, as land; oozy. on or hastening parturition.- ox"y-toc'ic, n. A medi- a popular favorite, the plant is oxy-. Derived from Greek (KcySj sharp, acid: a com- cine eflBcacIous In hastening parturition. oc"y-toc'icJ:, perni- — ox"y-lo!'u-ene, n. Chem.. Same as cresol.— considered by farmers a biuing form. In chemical woms it indicates the pres- ox- cious weed. Called also daitjf yt'y-lote, n. Spong. A spicule having a knob at one ence of oxygen or its compounds.— ox"y-a-can'thln, and ichiteweed. end and tapering to a point at the other. See lllus. under ox'^y-a-can'tliine, n, C/iem. A yellowish -white anior- etc. See SPICULE.— ox-yt'y-lo-tate, a.— ox"y-u'ric, a. Of, •Jc'*eyed^*ox>fencef compound crj'stailizablefromasolution ox. f'hous (CigHiflyOa), pertaining to. or resulting from the oxyurfs.— ox''y-H'ri- a alcohol or ether, contained with other allcaloids fn the ex'ford, city cide, n. A medicine tliat kills the oxyurls.— ox"y-u'rls, OxTord* n. A root of the barberry- {Berberin rulf/aris). Called also berbin «. Helminth. small ascarold threadworm Ojcyriris ver- in England: used specifically and nn« — ox"y-a8'ler, n. 3xford clay, Spicule consisting of acute rays radiating from a center. minerals. Usb Mesozolc foniiailon char- A See iUuB. under spicule.— ox-yVa-phon, n. Gr. Ar- In Class III., including oxrdized species, and designated Oxy- acteristic of the Uiddle Oolite. belUshaped vase with SeeeioLOOT.— O. inarbleH, cheol. 1. A dacere, are arranged anaer different orders the Oxyds, Borat^, two short handles, used, like the cra- Carbonates, Aluminates, Silicates, Aliiminisilicates, Phosphates, see Abcxdzliax.— move- O. ter, for holding wine mixed with Arsenates. Sulphate*, etc. T. ment, O. school, see Pu- S. HUNT Systematic Mineralogy ch. water. 2. A small vessel for holding U, p. 168. [sa. PUB. CO. '92.] sKTisai and tbactabiax.— O. The Oieye Daisy. vinegar or other condiment, one or a low laced shoe tied at the [< OXID.]— ox"y-da'ceou8, a. lie, more of which were sometimes served Instep. tracts, the "Tracts for the Times." 8ee ox'^y-da'tioii, n. Chem. Same as oxniATiON. — O. In a larger dish containing meat, etc.; ex-Id'yu-16'tgd, TRACTA BIAS ISM. the Uonian acetabulum.— ox-yd'a-la'^ted, a. Chem. Same as ex'hil', Bear's-foot. ox.fkeel^t. ox"y- OXIDULATKD. ox'heal''. n. beu'zene, n. Cliem. SameaspuK- ox'y-peii, ©s'i-jen, n. Chem. 1. colorless, tasteless, oxlKeart^, ex'hart*, n. A large beart-ehaped cherrr. NuL.— ox^y-ben-zo'ic, n. Chem. A ^ , „ ex'bArn*, n. Jamaican tree (Bueida J9u* and inodorous gaseous element, the most abundant and ox'horn^, A Of, peruJnIng to, or derived from hy- . /-,„„,, t,„^ - ^ cerw) of the myrobalan family (Comifretacem\ whose droxyl and benzoic acid.- oxy ben- -^Gre^^Red-ftgured iniportant yet discovered. uxyoapr.on. wood is not attacked by insects and whose bark Is used auilc add, any one of several met- The weight of the oxygen of the globe exceeds that of all other elements combined. It fonns by weight about a/* for tanning. Called also Uaek olive and olivebark. americ hydroxyl derivatives of benzoic acid. The ortho- compound Is better known as wiii(j//jc«c/'i.— ox"y»blep'- of the animal, ^A of the vegetable, and V" of the nilnerd ox'ld, * ©x'id. -id (xiii), n, Chem. Any binary com- sl-a, n. Pathol. Morbid acutcness of sight.- ox'^y* worlds, also 1/5 by volume of the atmospliere and '^/q by pound of oxygen, either with an element or ox'lde, t bro'^mic, a. Chem. Of, pertaining to, or containing oxy* weight of water. It unites with all elements except fluo- with an organic radical; as, calcium ox^; ethyl ooAd. gen and bromln.— ox*y-Du-tyr'ic, a. Chem. Of, per- rin and bromln, forming with some acids, with others alka- Oxfds, according to their empirical com position, are mon- taining to, or derived from hydroxyl and butjTic acid.— lis, and with others neutral substances; hence the name oxidMi.M->Oand5l(),M being any element), sesqaloxids oxybutyric acid, any one of several metatneric com- oxygen (acid-maker), given by Lavoisier, expresses but a (Mf03>. dioxldft 'MO,), trloxlds (M0<), telroxids jKiunds derived indirectly from butyric acid.- ox"y-cal'- small portion of its chemical relations. Artlflelal heat, light, (M04>.jpcnloxfdH (MyOs), and heptoxlds (MxOt). ci-uni, (I. Of, iHTtafnlng to, or containing o.\ygen and electricity, and electromagnetlsin are produced largely by Acidic oxids are those that unue with water to form calcium: especially designating the action of the oxyhy-lro- Its aid, aud all mechanical power obtained from combustion, acids, or combine with basic oxlds to form salts, as sulfur gen«flamele on Ume,lime, as Inin the calcium-light.—caicium-iigtit.— ox''y-ca»ox"^y< whether through the mcdiuin of steam, of heated air, or or trioxid (SOs), which unites with water a« n. Terat. A monster In whi<-li the head hasa peaked called vital air. It was once described as a "permanent th<>»<- that unite with acids or acidic oxlds to fcMm salts. sugar-loaf shape.— ox"y-<'epli-nl'ic, '/. Cntniom. Hav- gas": but In 1877 It was llquerted by Callletet In Paris and .MeiHllIc oxlds are those that consist of a metallic Ing a skull conical In the iij»pi-r fruiital region.- iix^y- by Pictet In Geneva, under a pressure of :j(ii(atniosptieren, at flfinent and oxygen, aod are for the most part basic. Nen- cepb'a-ly, n.— Ox"y-cepli-al'i-die, «. pl. Cruet. A the temperature of ~ 130° C. It Is clalmeii to have been tral oxlds are those that do not form adds with water. family of bypertldean aniphfpods, especially those with first discovered bv Eck, of Sulzbach, In 1489. and by Mayow, of can nut be obtained by removing water from adds, and do antennae curved and fixed under the very projecting head. England, In i6T4; but Its Importance In cli em Istrv dates from not form salts by uniting with either basic or acidic oxlds Ox^y»ceph'a-lns, n. (t. g.) — ox''y-ceph>aFid. a. & Its almost simultaneous but Independent rediscovery by or with adds. Peroxfdo are those that combine with n.— ox^y-ceph'a-lold* a.— ox'^y-chlo'ric, a. Of, per- l*rie8tley In England and Scheele In Sweden In 1774. We adds to form salts that corremond with oxlds containing taining to, or derived from oxygen and chlorin.— oxy- are indebted to Lavoisier for showing the relationship of lest oxygen than they themselves do. Thns, hydn^en dl- chloric add, same as pkbchlorio acid.— ox ^y- oxygen to many elements. < peroxida. oxld HiC>s) and barium dloxld (BaO|) are chlo'rid, ox'*T-chlo'ridetn. Chem. A salt formed by Since the discovery of oxygen the civilised world has undergone oiychiorid Oxifie* of all elemeota esoept Brotmne and Flooritw haT« been the union of a chlorid with an oxid; as, bismuth a revolution in manners and customs. The knowledge of the com- lM>Ut«iie< n. Chem. Same as for- — — n. Oxygen: a LatinizedLalinizea oxidized silver, sliver wiib a dark coating of silver mic ALDRHYi>B.— ox'^y-mo'ron, n. Rhet, That form -{jen'l-uiM,pn'l-uni, form.— ox'y- suinrl. tjHUAlly bath made by dipping In a of alkaline sulfid. of antithesis In which, for emphasis or In an epigram, con- j5en-t''za-[or -iia-]bl(e, a. Capable of being oxy- -nx'l.di''Ea.blrin'i (C.II-No) formed variously, as by reducing rows and a high clypeus. Ox^y-o'pes, n. (t. g.}— ox"- The American Academy at Boston selected the oxyhydrogen ortho-nitrnpheiij l-acetic acid with tin and hydrochloric y-op'ld, ox'^y-o^poid, a. A n.— ox^y-os-phre'si-n, blowpipe of Dr. Hare for the honor of the first award ever made ari.i. f < oxYtiKN 4- IKDOLE.1 ox-tn'dof;. ». Pftthol. Morbid acuteness of smell, ox'^y-os-phra'- by ihem from the Kumford meilnl fund, which had been accumu- ox^l-od'le; ex'iod'lc, a. Chem. Of, pertaining to, or si -n:. — ox^y-pj-n'tact, n. Spong. An oxyaster lating on their hands for more than forty years. containing lodin and oxygen. [< oxtobn + iodic. with 5 rays.- ox"y-pbe'nic, a. Chem. Of, pertaining B. 81IXIMAN in Am. Chemist Aug., Sept., '74, p. 78. ox'i-(iall'% n. Chem. 8ameas Of, pertaining to. or constituting an oxytoue.— ox'y- Ox-o'nI-an, «x-fl'ni-an. I. a. Of toes nearly free, and bill stmfjilit and Pointed. Ox"y- native or to-nlze, vt. To make oxytt)ne. Oxford. Kiiirland, or iU university. II. n. A rham^pfaos* n. (t. g.)— ox''y-rhniii'phid* ?i.— ox^y- of inhabitant of Oxford, or a student of Oxford University. rhain'phoid, a.— ox'y-rhin(e,

so; thin; = a«ure; boA, i, obsolete: variant. oa : out; •11; ia = ftfud, |9 = fature; e = k; church; dh =

oyer 1360 pabulum o'ver, O'yfir. r». taw. To hear; hence, to inquire tog. 3+. An oyster.— o.*fiHbery, H. 1, The industry of oy8'ler»plaiit",«is't^r-plaut", n. 1. Same as salsify. taking oysters, ri, A place where oystering Is carried on. tnrough testimony into a cause of complaint. [ < F. oui/; 2. The sea-lungwort [Aie/te/itna matitima), wliose leaver — o.ifl villi »• The act, process, or business of gather- < L. auiiio, hear") iiK< have oyster-like flavor; found on seacoasts in northern ing oysters; ovsterlng.— o.sfloal, ". [U. S.| ArattuiKUi trial for- latitudes. — binek oyster^plant, black salsify. See vi- o'yer, n. A hearing or of cauees; an assize; whiffi oysters are placed in order to be submerged In fresh PKR'S'GRASS.- fSpanieh o.* a Spanish herb (.Sf-otymrui lueriv, in pleading, a petition by a party to an action, water lu'fore being sent to market.— «. stork* n. 1. A HispanicuM) of the aster family (VoinpoHitse). with long praying that he might hear read to him a deed or other small fork for use In eating raw oysters. 'Z* in oyster-cul- tapering edible roots eaten in the same way salsify. which was pleaded and held by the opposite ture, a large manv-tined pitchfork, used In strewing young as instrument oys'triget* «. An ostrich. party; in mo*ieni practise, the production of such a docu- oysters over an artificial bed.— o.»KaKe* n. A model of an oyster used as a standard of merchantable size.— o.sBraHH, o-ze'iia, o-zt'na or -ze'na, n. Pathol. A chronic, usn- ment, or a copv therittf, by the party liolding it. n. [Local, U. S.] Seaweed growing upon or among oysters. ally syphilitic, ulceration of the niieal cavities, attended — oyer and lenninef. 1. [Ehk.) A court composed' — o.»ifreen*n. Either of two seaweeds (Ufva Lactttca by an exceedingly fetid discharge. L. ozaB7ia, Gr. of two or more judKcs of JL-Jsizc, held at least twice a year [< < and 6. inttmima): so called from their bright-green tint, and oz5, smell.] in each couniv i,witli certain exceptions) under a royal com-. ozaina, < o-zac^nat. from their being frequently attached to oysters.— o.ebani- mteion einpi>werin(£ them to hear and determine criminal o'zIer,n.. Same as osier. mer, 7i. [Conn., l'. S.j A square, blunt-headed hammer catues there pendlntf. 'Z, [U. S.l lu some of the States, a o"zo-ce'rlte,0'zo-si'raitor-ce'rIt,n. Mineral. used to break the shells In opening oystt-rs for the trade.— A waxy court of hljiher criminal jurisdiction. translucent mixture of natural paraffins occurring o.fkesr, n. [V. S.l A small wooden keg formerly used in usual- o'yeB*, ' O'yes' (xiiit. v. [OF.] Hear; hear ye! an in- New England for transporting raw oysters.- o.sknile, ?i. ly in coal-measures, sometimes m such c^uantity as to be * troductory to command attention to a o'yea", word A strong knife used in opening oysters.- oys'ter-inan, mined with profit. It varies in composition between 0,^ proclamation about to be made, as by a court crier at the n. A man engaged In fishing for, rearing, or selling oysters, Hmi and C25H52, and Is colorless to white when pure, but opening of conrt: usually thrice repeated. oy»'ter-erJ.— o.»park, n. l. An oyster-farm. otherwise often leek-green, yellowish, brownish-yellow, or ))rown, and when brown sometimes greenish bv transmitted And so it roars, sod nges, and brajs; drum beating, steeples Such oyBter-farms exist now in large numbers, mainly in Eng- ' light. It is pai-atfin peiUin^: criere mshing with hand-bells: Oy«, Oyez, All men to land, where a single private oy8ter»park, near Whit«table, is val- used extensively as a purified for various their Districte to be enroUed ! ued at two millions of dollars. purposes. Carlyls French Revolution vol. i, bit. v, ch. 5. p. 177. [H.] Putnam^a Magazine, Mine Oyster Oct., 1868, p. 431. [< Gr. ozd, smell, + khve, wax.] mineral wax^; oy'lel* '1. Same as oilht. *2, Same as PARC— o. patty* a patty or pasty containing o"zo-ke'rltet. oyn'ouut* n. An onion. oysters.- o.tplanter* ». An oyster-farmer.- o.splanl- o'^zo-iia'tloiif O'zo-n^'ehun, n. The act or process of oys'ler, eis'tgr, vi. To engage in oyBter- fishing. iiiff, n. The placing of small oysters upon artificial beds.— treating with ozone. o.iulover, Ji. The European oystcr-eatclier.- o.srake* oys'ter, n. 1 . An ostreoid bivalve found in salt and brack- o'zone, O'zOn, C. I. S. W.^ Wr. (o-zOn', W.% n. Chem, ti. [New Eng., U. S.l A long-handled iron rake, having tines ish water moored by the left 'j,'. A colorless gae with a pungent odor usually well curved and from 6 to 12 inches long, used by a shell to stones, shells, like that of chlorin, formed variously, other boatman In gathering oysters and quahaugs In water too as of electricity and the Mice. OMrea edtdis^ deep for the use of tongs.— o.ireel', n. [t^outhern U. S.l by the passage through wliich la hennaphrodite, and An oyster-bed, often forming a dangerous reef In southern the air, and regarded as an allotropic O. oir0nica, which has the waters, o.srockl:.— o.^ttcraper* n. [Eastern U. S.] A form of oxygen containing three atoms sexes separate,are the common small oyster-dredge.— o.sseed, n. 1. Young oysters suit- in the molecule (Os). edible species of Europe and able for transplanting to artificial beds: seed-oysters. •£» Ozone is ... an extremely powerful oxi- America respectively. Oysters _ Oyster-spat.- o.ssiRn* H. [Southern U.S.I Aboard marked dising a^nt; possesses strong bleaching snawn In northern regions In and with the letter O, set up to mark the boundaries of marsh- disinfecting powers, corrodes cork, caout- May and June, and at that time land claimed as an oyster-fann.- o.sspat* n. The spawn chouc, and other org'anic substances; and rap- for time afterward and some of the oyster.- o.ttonffs, n. [U. S.l A pair of long-han- idly oxidises iron, copper, and even silver when are not considered desirable dled stout rakes,wilh heavy moist, as well as dry mercury and iodine. for food. ciliated gills The In ward 'bending teeth, hav- FowNES Chemistry, Ozone in vol. i, pt. ii, (Which fonn layers round a ing the handles (stales) piv- p. 122. [J. A. C. '??.] part of the body) and the labial oted together like scissors, [< Gr. oz5 (ppr. 02i5«), smell.] nal|>8 brluK the food, consist- used a boat to and from — I n. with iHK of minute aquatic organ- o'zone box", A oox gather up oysters from the double walls of fine wire gauze, in which isni-s, to the moutn. Oyster-tongs. bottom. In water not more . are exposed chemically prepared test- 1- Nippers for 2. Some other bivalve li- — , gather- than 20 feet deep. o. « papers for detecting the presence of .„ «„'„,,„, n. ing solitary oysters 2. ^PParatus iTor kened to that described whelk, A herbivorous ozone. 71. ^" ^^^^ ^^ o..caKct.-o.=paper. A above, as the pearl-oyster or cerlthlold gastropod ( Pota- Ry*^*"'*?."^- *.''T^"i? ^ bibulous t.ieciricai '*'^ '^°«''' *»f ^*'« handles, paper coated with a mixture of J;"^ a thorny oyster. 3. The mides eheninn^) of Queens- starch and potassium lodid, which turns land, associated with oysters; a toondah.— "^zone.nynnJ" morsel of dark meat in the o.swoman, n. blue when exposed to the action of ozone, A woman who sells oysters, o.swencht; o.swifet. '. (, c-irculatintf- hollow of the bone upon the A Cluster of American — o-zo'nic, C. (o-zon'ic, W.), a. oys'tersbed", ©is'tyr-ljed", n. 1. A place where oys- Cke7n. Of, pertaining to, or containing tubes f*"" passmg- l)ack of a fowl. 4. [Slang.] Oysters. lers are found or where they are grown. ozone.— o^'z«-iiir'er-ou8,a. Chem. cool water throutfh Some delicacy; tidbit; prize. OY.oistre '?"^'' 'camber [< (P.hmtre), A natural bed is a colony of natural growth, often form- (Containing, furnishing, or generating J"f < L. mtrea, < Gr. mtreon, oyster^ ing an elevated rocky ridge; an artificial bed Is tract ozone.-o-zo"ni-fi.ca'lion,». Chem. [" a of ^i" ^^^s^^^f U"" Compounds, etc. .- — IreHhf^varer oyster, an etherl- act of generating of to sea-bottom upon which oysters are cultivated. The or exposing "hroSh^ th? hole^ old tijvalvc of African and South-American rivers, resem- ' ' ' ' the acUon of ozone.- o-zo'ni-fy, rt. Oysterrbeds . . . are called beds and banks in the northern Jamo the spai bllnj; an oyster in form and adhering to rocks.— S oys'ter* ' ' Chem. charge with convert into Plates and bars ' or rocks ' in the southern, while in the Gulf of To or between the outer banket n. Same as oysteB'Bed. [Southern o.*bart Mexico you hear only of * oyster- reefs.' ERNEST INGERSOLL Oys- ozone.— o"zo-ni-za'[or*sa'ltion,». wall and the wall r. S.).— n. iLocal, S.] oyster-shop.— o.*bay, U. An o.» ter Industries pt. ii, p. 220. [GOV. PTG. OFF. '81.1 The act of treating with ozone.— o'zo- of the chamber, boat* n. A boat used in the oyster-fishery or in oyster- Mize or -nise* vt. To charge with which is lined on 6'eo^. stratum containing fossil cultivation.— o.«brood« n. A young oyster. In its first 2. A oysters, oys'ter* ozone.— o'zo-ni"zer or -ser, H. An the side toward s summer, oyn'ter-iinst*— o.^catcber, 7^. Aha?matono- bank'^t; o.^bart; o.^bottoni:;:; o.^fieldf. apparatusforgeneratlngozone.— o-zo'- with tin-foil, con- '^ doid bird having black-and-white plu- oys'ter«farm", eis'tfir-fdrm', n. A space ol* sea-bot- no-ffrapb, n. Same as ozonoscope, nected with an in- mage and red feet and bill; a sea»ple. tom where oysters are cultivated; an oyster-park. ~o'"zo-noK'ra-pheT, «. One skilled duction-coil. Elec- „ It feeds mainly upon small mollusks In examining or detecting atmospheric *"« sparks passing oy»'terslarm"lng, n. The business of planting and throuffh the oxygen caught between tide-marks. JIsBinato- ozone.— o"zo-noiii'e-ter, 7i. An In- cultivating **'' pus ostraleffus is the European and seed-oysters. Oyster-fanning was practised Btrument for measuring the amount of *"" a^^ross the space (s> ozonize it //. paUiatus the American species, o.s extensively by the Konians. In the United States the in- ozone present In the air.-o"zo-no- birdt,— ©• oocklnilt raw oysters dustry dates from about 1820. The ground to be cultivated Is first thoroughly cleaned with dredges; shells, broken pa*8es out at (. _. . placed In a small drlnklng-glass and 71. device The American, rt o-zo'^no-Hcope, A for show- Oys- covered with a highly seasoned dress- stone, or gravel being then laid as cultcli, mature oysters ing the presence or amount of ozone.— o-zo^no-seop'ic. ier-catcher. 1/32 ing.-o.jcrnb, n. A small crab iPin- are planted on tlils to the extent of about fifty bushels per «. Chem. Of, pertaining to, or Indicating the presence of nolheres acre. The ova from the female oyster, fertilized by the OHtreum), the female of which dwells as a com- ozone.— o'zo-nous, fl. Of, pertaining to, or containing mensal within oyster-shells.— o.icracker, n. [U. S.] A milt of the male, attach themselves to the cultch. The ozone. grounds are kept free from stai-s and other enemies by small cracker or biscuit served with oysters.— o.icrush- O-zo'ni-iini, o-zO'ni-oni, n. A form-genus of fungi. er, u. [Austral.] The Port Jackson shark {Heterodon- means of cotton mops attached to iron bars, dragged along 0. avriconium is said to cause the root-rot of cotton. [ < tftH philippi).— Ot*cfk\tUTe^ n. Same as otstkk-farm- the bottom. When the oysters are two or three years old Gr. ozdn, ppr. of smell.] iNO. os'^tre-i-curturcl:. — o. iCiiltiiHst, «.— o.s they are transplanted Into shallower or fresher waters, ozd, dredge* n. A dredge for taking oysters. See lllus. under where they are fattened for market. o"zo-8lo'ml-a,0"zo-8t0'mi-a, n. Med. Offensive breath, DREDGE, o.fdraat.— o.ffifih, n. ]. The toadflsh {Bat- oys'ter-lng, eis'tgr-ing, n. Oyster-fishing. due to foulness of the mouth or to disease. [< Gr. ozd, rachus tau), which frequents oyster-beds, ij. The tau- oys'ter*liuff* els'tgr-ling, n. A young or small oyster. smell, -^ stoma, mouth.] P

Greek words were spelled ph., jd -|- A, as in iip'hiU.. being Phosphorus. (3) Ma/h. In the Greek foi?n: (a) [n] The pp Mv the (ireek pronunciation. Fully Latinized words were ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter: the ^/ fironounced with/, and their descendants are so written incommensurable number 3. 14159265+. Seen. (6) [II] Roman. Black Letter. Script. n Italian, Spanish, Swedish, Danish, and Russian. Such The continued product of all the numbers from the one words, when naturalized in Early English, were written specified down to unity, (c) Astron. A parallax; espe- P, p, pt, //. [pees, P's. or /V, piz, />/.] 1 . A letter: the with/; Greek (itayraaU, It. Sp. T'f'. Janfasia, Dan. Sw. cially, the sun's mean equatorial horizontal ir = 8', 80. sixteenth in the English alphalxjt; in BelPs "Visible fantatd. Old Frencli, Early English /a?* ^£wi«, fancy; so pa, pil, n. Papa: a natural infantile articulation accept- Speecli," the sign of lip-closure, as in ap, or of lip- D: frantic, frenzy., etc. etl in many languages, especially in the reduplicated form, opening, as in pa, the vocal cords being open and the In the pronunciation of this Dictionary / is used as tiie child's name tor father. nose closed. It Is called a labial, surtf, non-vocal, or throughout, but in the vocabulary both forms are given pa*, n. [Scot.l A pall. smooth, and a mute. — /)Aas established in general use, /as recommended by pn'nffet, n. Same as pedage. If the vocal cords are closed so as to vibrate, the lip- same the Philological Societies. paal'stabf n. Same as palstaff. movements give &, or, with the nose open, m. If the lower paan'haa9'% /'. Same as panhas. Capital is lip be closed to the upper teeth./ Is made v b. P from Latin P < Old Greek ^ < f {> for p, for pnaril, purd, ;i. [S. Afr.] The zebra. r< D. paarrf. horee.] the relations Greek II) < Phenician < hieratic < hieroglyph For historic of these letters, see R and F. 7 ,ji55»^ g. l*anl>i^ p6s. n. [Local, U. S., or Obs.l The Easter festival; The Anglo-Saxons originally used/ In place of the Parent The hieroglyph is a shutter; the Phenician name is m-^ Prtsch.- PaaH day, Easter day.— P, an Easter egg. Speech English words eifir, p. The in p have been borrowed In mouth, > Greek pi, > Latin y;^, > English pe., pi. Tiie especially as used In the sport of striking or rolling them late times mostly from Latin and Greek; Parent Speech rare Anglo-Saxon nine peordh, looking scunewhat like together to test their strength. JXiUr " Anglo-Saxon /tf(/pr. father. Piternttl, paternos- inverted M, is of obscure origin and name; it is the paaH^t, n. Pace. ler, and the like are modern borrowings from Latin. fourteenth letter in the futhorc. dates or the differ- paa'nu, pS'u, n. (S. Afr.] The kori; bustard. The sound of p (not ph) Is constant; when It comes Into For pab* pab, n. [Scot.] The refuse of fiax. unphouetic combinations. It assimilates other letters, as ent alphabets and the like, see A. pa-boiiche', pa-bQsh', n. Same as baboosii. preterit -ped pronounced pt: hop&l = hOpt; ad -\- p, oh -\- The history of the characters is shown as follows: p, pab'yu-lum, afford- becoming aph, opp, aa In upp&tr, opprenx: or It is silent, pab'H-luni, n. 1. Any substance as In Greek initial pn, p#, pt, in pnenmatic, pmlm, Ptole- ing nutriment to animals or plants; anything that sus- tnaic, and a few other words. Gemination of m before a tams life and renews organic tissues; sustenance; nu- surd « or t gives p.- ThomimWrn, > Thompson; Jfortfi- triment; aliment; food; by extension, anything that am(m)ton, Northampton: > redem{p)tlon. supports any physical process; material consumed. The Anglo-SaxouH wm few latilal mutes, and p is a com- Egyptian PhenI- Fire, that upon, doth not continue al- paratively ran: WtWr In literary English: for percentages, J?vntfic Old Ro- needs a pabulum to prey Hieratic. clan. Greek. ways one and the mtme numerical substance. R. OUDWORTH In- ee F. Scientific temis are mostly from Greek or Latin. fh^Ker man. tell .Syst. Universe vol. i. ch. p. 106. [o. & N. 'Si.J and p, Iwglnning many prefixes. Is the most frequent Initial 1, 2. An abbreviation: Page. Piano; soft- In the Greek dictionary, and nearly so In the I>atin. In an (1} [p.] (3) [p.] 2. FIgurativelv, anything that nourishes or develops the Kngllsh dictionary giving Bclentlflc terms freely the initial ly. (3) Naut. [p.] Passing showers: an entry in a ship's mind or soul; food for thought; spiritual nourishment. /)'8. Including rank with the c's, log-book. Zool.. (a) Partim. Pectoral fin. ph% and outnumber all (4) [p.] (6) For mental pabulum also, every higher creature, and especially other letters but «. (.5) J/erf. (a) Papilla, (b) Punil. (H) See Appendix. 3. man, is at first dependent on adult aid. Ph = f, < Greek ^.— In roots common to Greek and A symbol noting: (1) In the Roman notation of the Si'KNCER Education ch. 2, p. 114. [a. "89.1 Latin, Greek ^ = h&i\nf: ^vta = fu\, be; but borrowed middle ages, 400; with a dash (p), 400,000. (2) Chem. [L., fodder, < pasco, feed.] eofa, firm, ^k; at, fare, Record; elfm^nt, $r = over, Sight, % = usage; tin, machine, % = r^ew; obey, nd; net, ner, at^m; full, riile; but, bum; aisle;