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Show CR i Y CryPT0'L0GY.7. /i [4plnlu and Ady®-. el .;Enie igmatical lahgua eICRY‘STAL Ao f [xg:fiy_a}?x_@& 70 Cur. @. a. [ from the noun. T bring forth : ufed of beafts, or of " covered with a fine coat, called aranea. woman in contempt i The' parts of the eye are made convex, an ~efpecially the cryBalline bumour, which is of a lenticular figure, convex on both fides Ray on the Creatitn rally colourlefs bodies, of regularly angular figures, compofed of fimple," no no tick, giving fire wit flexile or elaf fteel no CU . fide, which makes a {mall cavity in th glafly humour in which it lies. It i 1.. Cryftals are hard, pellucid, and natu filamentous. plates fer; CI}Z;:S{\L"ZA TION menting with ‘acid menftrua, and cal C i k / i [from cryftal Cubb'd in a cabbin, on a mattrefs laid On a brown george with loufy fwabbers fed Dead wine, that ftinks of the Borrachio, fu From a foul juck, or greafy maple cup CUBA,TIO'N Hill on Folfils v neral {pirit. o . .as alfo of its hardnefs, which are ever the fame Woodward. 2,i Cr ft i alf ufe fo fa it ou bod o - caft in the glafs-houfes, called alfo ey~ . Jtal glafs, which is carried to«a: degre . of perfection beyond the common glafs' ~_though it comes far fhort of the white ‘nefs and vivacity. of the nataral cry/fal VT Chambers 3. Cryftals [in chymiftry] exprefs falts o oother-matters fhot or congealed in man times of the revolution them "of their faltnefs, as of their figure. Thi being-an immutable and perpetual law, by knowin the figure of the cryftals, we may underftand what the texture of the particles ought to be, which can cubes of their diftances CuzE Root Cu'BrIck Roat. - form' thofe cryftals; and, on the other hand, b knowing the texture. of the particles, may be de 2. The mafs forme concretion. LRuincy give by congelation o Wovdward's Nat. Hifs Th cubic origi of number or numbe is formed: thus two i Chambers has an aromatick fmell, and is acrid t the tafte. . Cubeb Java ar brough fro Hill Aromaticks, as cubebs, cinnamon, and nutmegs are ufually put into crude poor wines, to give the If you diffolve copper‘in agua Sfortisy ot {pirit o nitre, you may, by, eryflallizing the folution, ob adj n. / Cu'seB. z./. A fmall dried fruit refembling pepper, but fomewhat longer, of greyifh brown colour. on the furface. I To CRY'STALLIZE. v.a. [from cryfal.] To. caufe to congeal or concrete in cryifhort time the metals will fhootinto cerfain cryftals. t l Bacon Cry'sTaL to th Grez's Cofindlogia the cube-root of eight particles, whereof each confifts, out from among - siate ey: Aalf olom s ML NGB gmbers If the menftruum be overcharged, within afe proportioca number, by whofe multiplication int itfelf, and again into the produét, an All natural metallick and mineral cryfallization were effected by the water, which firft brought th the matter of the ftrata Chambers All the mafter planets ‘move about the fun a feveral diftances, as their common centre, an with different velocities. This common law bein obferved in all of them, that the fquares of th that cne might as eafily divef termined the figure of the cryftals Re z. [In arithmerick.] See CuB1ck Number into' minute ‘particles, yet when they are forme into, cryftals, they each of them reaffume thejr proper fhapes; f the degree of its diaphaneity and of its refration therefore equal ' that,'let them be ever fo much divided and reduc Cryflalis certainly known and diftinguifhed b adj. [from cubo, Lat. 1. [In geometry. A regular {olid body confifting of fix fquare and equal face or fides, and the angles all right, an .than they are drawn by the fluid, then will they Tun into cryftals And this is peculiar to thofe Brown., Dis ing exaétly the folid content of any propofed body Harris CUBE. #. /. [from xioc, a die. and filtering it, to ‘evaporate, till a film appear a the top, ‘and:then et it ftand to thoot; and this i does by that attradtive force which is in all bodies and particularly in falt, by reafon of its folidity whereby, when the menftruum or fluid, in whic +fuch particles flow, is fated enough or evaporated fo that the faline particles are within each other' ,wattractive powers, - they draw one another more feen in divers caves, where the cryffal hangs in i licidiis A " Bacon -1f cryftal be a ftone, it'is not' immediately con«creted by the efficacy of cold, but rather'by a'mi '1?1'1' Dié Cu'BaTURE. 7. /. [from cube.] The find cording to the nature and texture ofithe falts, Th "method is by diffolving any faline body in water Ifland cryfal is a genuine fpar, of an extremel _pure; clear,and fine textu - fel e om either- ble(mifhed with flaws ot 'fpots, or" ftained with an other colour.: A remarkable propertyof this body which has much employed the- writers on opticks is its double refraGion; fo that if it be laid ove a black line, drawn on paper, two lines ‘appear i the place of one Hill, Water, as it feems, turneth into cryfal's ‘as i n. [o [cubatio, Latin. act of lying down Shn Bher lai many | £ Sg?hg: cizrllggx:t?on ofrf}arli:es.articles as refem- | CUBATORY . various {pecieMDR s of it produced in diffe en bles, the form of a cryftal, variogfly modified, ac- cumbent parts of the globe Dryden's Peyfius more oily fpirits Floyer on the Humours 1. Confifting of cryftal tain a goodly blue Bo le } Cu'BICAL Then, Jupiter; thou king of Gods, clean.sh data import.tsv out README % ¢ C y s ALLIZE. ©. ) To coagulate, | Cv'srck Thy cryftal window ope, look-out. Shakefps'Cymb. { 9[from cute. congeal, concrete, or fhoot into cryftals. 1. Having the f 2. Bright ;- clear ;. tranfparent y_ lucid r o properties of Recent urine will cryfallize by infpiffation, an pellucid. c be ¢ afford a falt neither acid nér alkaline clean.sh data import.tsv out README In groves we live, and lie on mofly beds By cryftal ftreams that murmur through the meads. Dryden CRY'sTALLINE. ad). [cryfallinus, Latin. 1. Confifting of cryftal Mount eagle to my palace cryfalline Shakefpeare's Cymbeline We provided ourfelves with' fome fmall recei ers, blown of cryfalline glafs. 2. Bright { clear; pelluci Arbuthnot on Aliments CUB. #. /. [of micertain etymology. I. The young of a'beaft; generally of a " bear or fox I would outftare the erneft eyes that look Pluck the young {ucking cubs, fro Boyle tranfparent. in and placing'pebbles at the head of the "current . lio;‘,)u;rf:i' the belly-pinched wolf Sbakefpeare's King Lear z. The young ofa whale, perhaps of an viviparous fifh that the water may ftrain through them ol Bacon's Natural Hiftary He on the wings of cherub rode fub im Tw On the cryflalline fky,in faphir thron < Hluftrious far and wide bear woul In the eagle's deftroying one fox's cubs, ther power executed with oppreffion L' Eftrazge It is etfected by caftin might whales which fwelling feas ha toft One as a-mountain vaft; and with her cam A cuby not much inferior to his dame Waller ... Milton Cry'sTariing Humour. n. /. The feco -I'humour thfe ‘eye, that lies immediate- | 3. In reproac contempt, a young bo 1y nest to the 'aqueous behin the uyea, or glhrl "oppofite to the papilla, nearer to the. fore part than the back part of the globe It is the leaft of the humours, but muc mor {o10lid than a Of them. Its fi ur e, m ghlc'h" is convex on both fides, regurf VB v ; ~'0fewl:'w?1' yhnvequaé fegmen.ts O,f. fp} ergs v‘. 'L I)‘ ¢ em oy bbansbus baddoid 1 convex 1s on it gaiv 1 DRYMA (U back e When time hath fow'd a gr. izzle von thRyEOcaEfe? I Or will not elfe thy craft fo quickly gro That thine own trip fhall be thine overthrow Shakefpeare abeloca hO moft comxfcal q%‘hr datcom:i.try }fqer, wit the cquipage of a wife and two daughters cam to" Mr. Smbpwc]';; fhop lat night; bbut, fuc tw | - ynjicked cubs faces with four cubical dice; becaufe there are f the fhe-bear Shakefpeare This night, wherein the cub-draw The clarifying of ‘water is an experiment tend. | - Kee their fur dry + "ing to the health ; befides the pleafure of t e eye when wate is cryflalline A clofe veflel, containing ten cubjcal feet of air will not fuffer a wax candle of an ounce to bur in it above an hour before it be fuffocated Wilkins's Matb, Mag It is above a hundred to one, againft any particular throw, that you do not caft any given fet o many feveral combination dice. 2 of the fix faces of fou Bentley's Sermons It is applied to numbers 5 T?}f ':‘g':b;r ghifons; ';'"lt'il';d '""'_Melg' ti fiu:re nuf{n 0. dxxtee;: > t; tj)'a aaan;) muf 1;_"1 : f)' ou;,f pro ‘;;fl | rc g osc S should uppofe multitude aétually infinite, th e e muft be infinit roots, and fquare and cubick number 5. yet, of ne ceflity, the root is but the fourt part of th {quare, and the fixteenth part of th cubict number Hale's Origin of Markind The number of ten hath been a highly extolled, as con aining even, odd, long and plain quadrate and cwbical numbers Brown's Vulgar Err Cu'BrcaLNEss, 7. /. [from cubi al.] Th ftate or quality of being cubical Cusr'curary. adj. [cubiculum, Lati Fitted for the pofture of lying down Cuftom, by degrees, changed their c bicular beds into difcubitory, and introduced fathion t go-from the baths unto thefe. Brozun's Vulg Err Cu'BrrorM. adi. [from cube and Sorm. Congrewe, Of the fhape ofa cube 3 CUBI'T |