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Show E. houfe wher drefled An hungr hi I provifion ar fol If the wood be very hard, as cbony, or lignu vitze, they are to turn: they ufe not the fame tool WMoxon's IMech. Exercife they do for foft woods Oftby the winds extinét the fignal lies ready traveller ftept into an eatinghoufe fo dinner EAVES . /. [erere, Saxon. Eftran Ere night has half roll'd round her eboz throne. Gay The edge DrunEsri'sry. u. /. [ebrietas, Latin. kennefs; intoxication by ftrong liquors of the roof which overhang the houfe Every night he come Bitte With mufick of all forts, and s compos' To her unworthinefs:* it nothing ft dsu To chide him from our eaves As if his life la Shakefp. Tempef? liftene unde windows a [ebba eprloo Th Saxon ebbe the fea iron wit violen Whe things to that low brough which you fpeak of hea tide of man's life, after it once turnet declineth, ever runneth with a perpetual falling ftream, but never floweth again perhaps fculpture was alfo declining Dryden Near my apartment let him pris'ner be That I his hourly ebébs of life may fee What is it he afpires to pur Well, I am ftanding water --T"1l teach you how to flow --D {o E/BEN E'son E'sony, . Jo [ebenus, Latin. heavy, black A hard valuable wood which admits a fine glofs the heat an ebullitio as well as heat Newton may be produce ebullition; for if fal ammoniack volatil alkali diffolve i water or an b mixe to folve the phenomena framed t Milton Cycle and epicycle or in orb Milton Whence is it that planets move all one and th fame way in orbs concentrick, while comets mov all manner of way in orbs very eccentrick Newton's Opticks 3. Not terminating in the fame point; no dire¢ted by the fame principle Whatfoever affairs pafs fuch a man's hands, h crooketh them to his own ends; which muft need be often eccentrick to the ends of his mafter 4 lIrregular anomalous Tl}i motion centrick an Bacon's Effays deviatin ftated and conftant methods fro like others of the times, feems ec irregular King Charles A charaller of an eccentrick virtue, is the mor Then from whate'er we can to fenfe pr e Common and plain, or wond'rous and ablg-‘: From nature's conftant ot eccentrick lay The thoughtful foul this gen'ral inferenc:: dr w "Fhat an effe® muft prefuppofe a caufe P:;o EccexrricrTY. z /i [from eccentict, 1. Deviation from a centre 2. The ftate of having a different c ntr from another circle In regard of eccentricity, and the epicy le wher in it moveth, the motion of the moon is unequal, Bl'f‘w By reafon of the fun's eccentricity t h e; tl and obliquity to the equator, he appears to ys ( move unequally 3. Excurfion from the proper orb Holder The duke at his g return from his eccez trici fo fo I account favourites abroad, met no goo n}r‘::.v fig Watton between the focus and the centre of th carth's elliptick orbit Harris Eccuy'mosis. . [ [sxopori,] Livi {pots o blotche extravafated blood in the fkin, made b Quingy Ecchymgfis may be defined an extrayafaion o the blood in or under the fkin, the fkin remainin whole Laxation chymofis Wilesnan are accompanied with tumour and er Wifeman ECCLESIA'STICAL ECCLESIA'STICK adj [ecclefiaflicus J . Lat. to the church; not civil Relatin Is difcipline an ecclefiaffical matter or civil I an ecclefraftical, it mutt belong to the duty of th mimifters Hooker Clergymen, otherwife little fond of obfcure terms yet in their fermons are liberal of thofe which the find in ecclefiaftical writers Swift A church of Englandman has a true veneratio for the fcheme eftablifhed among us of ecclefiaflic government Srwifl Eccresia'stick. z /. [from the adjective.] A perfon dedicated to the miniftries of religion The ambition of the ecclefiafticks deftroyed th purity of the church Burnet's Theory Eccorro'ricks, n f [# and dmOr. Such medicines as gently purge the belly fo as to bring away no more than th natural excrement teftines lodge in the in The body ought to be maintained in its dailyex cretions by fuch means as are eccoprotick Harvey on the Plagu EcHiNa'TE, 1| adj. [from echinus, Latin. Briftled like an hedgeEcuina'TeD hog fet with prickles An echinated pyrites in fhape approaches the echi nated cryftalline balls Waodward on Folfif E'CHINUS. . /. [Latin. To fave appearances : they gird the fpher With centrick, and eccentrick, feribbl'd o'er Shakefp. Tempeyt But oh, he ebbs! the fmiling waves decay For ever lovely ftream, for ever ftay Halifux is no By centrick or eccentrick, hard to tell They build, unbuild, contrive to eb Hereditary floth infiru@s me poure Thither his courfe he bend Through the calm firmament; but up or down oppofe to wafte of vitriol their conceit eccentricks and epicles, and a wonderful engine of orbs Bacon Though my tide of bloo Hath proudly flow'd in vanity till now Now it doth turn and eb4 back to the fea. Shakefp From thence the tide of fortune left their fhore to decay ebullition Aftronomers to jow 2. To decline fpiri 2. Not having the fame centre with another circle: fuch circles were fuppofe by the Ptolemaick philofophy Dryd And ebb'd much fafter than it fow'd before Dryden's Zn o ECCE'NTRICAL adj [ec ent icu La ECCE/NTRICK 1. Deviating from the centre Is it not this To fhed the low remains His laft poor b4 of blood in your defence Addifon's Cato 76 EBB. wv. 7. [from the noun. 1. To flow back towards the fea fortis with an acid, an ebu/lition, with a greater degre of cold; will enfue Arbutbnot on Aliments an Our ¢bb of life for eyer takes away Rofcommon The greateft age for poctry was that of Auguftu ‘Caefar, yet painting was then at its loweft ¢4, an an by thi an Thus all the treafure of our flowing years aqu the metal A violent cold al Raleigh's Hiffory of a fluid effetted by a violent motion of the parts; and doe not their motion argue, that the acid parts of th liquor rufh towards the parts of the metal with violence, and run forcibly into its pores, 'till they ge between its outmoft particles and the main mafs o Spenfer on Ireland ‘Thi of the part upon filings of iron, diffolves the filings with a grea wafte an motio occafioned by the ftruggling of particle of different properties Quincy Then with a gentle €45 retire again And render back their cargo to the main Addifor or Italy all the war the acid and nitrous fpirits of aqua fortis Brown's Vulgar Errours 3. That ftruggling ot effervefcence whic arifes from the mingling together an alkalizate and acid liquor; any inteftin And fhove the loaden veflels into port finifhe darknefs Baeon Hither the feas at ftated times refort hav fo tha and, in the end, a precipitation of a black powder The clear {fun on his wide wat'ry glaf Gaz'd hot, and of the frefh wave largely drew As after thirft; which made their flowing thrin From ftanding lake to tripping ebé, that ftol With foft feot tow'rds the deep Milton Yo diffolution of gold and filver difagree in their mixture there is great ebu/lition exat image of human life, becaufe i oy Whall exempted from its frailties 4+ Eccemtricity of the earth is the diftanc infidiou 1. The reflux of the tide toward oppofed to fow decay chec [French. . f noife and emication; as alfo a craffe and fumid exhalation, caufed from the combat of _the fulphur o Jutch. 2. Decline zar Errours Iron, in aqua fortis, will fall into ebu/lition wit WUnder our tents I'll play the ecave/dropper Shake/p To hear if any mean to fhrink from me 7. / Brown' fl/,"lu‘J‘ liftener EBB inf Esviri'rion. z. fi [ebullio; Lat. 1. Theat of boiling up with heat 2. Any inteftine motion phrafe, to liften under windows 7. /. [eaves and drop. antidot That religion which excufeth Nozh in furprifal will neither acquit ebrigfizy nor ebriety in their intended perverfion Browsn. Ea'vespror. v. a. [eaves and drop. To catch what comes from the eaves; i Ea'vEsDROPPER a of the bridle which a horfeman gives horfe, by a jerk of one rein, when h refufes to turn Esr1o'sity. 7. /. [ebriofitas, Latin,] Habitwal drunkennefs on't If in the beginning of Winter the drops of th eaves of houfes come more flowly down than the ufe, it portendeth a hard and frofty Winter. Bacor Uther'd with a fhower fill When the guft hath blown his fill Ending on the ruftling leaves With minute drops from off the eaves Milton The icicles hang down from the eaves of houfes Woodward. commo a failed EBRI'LLADE for he perfifts From eaves of reeds almonds hath commonl efpe AIls avell that endsawell His tears run down his beard, like Winter drop 7 ECH BC 1. A hedgehog 2. A fhell fith fet with prickles The fPricldy head 3. [With botanifts. cover of the feed, or top of any plant A member or orna4. [In architeure. ment, taking its name from the roughnefs of the carving, refembling the prick Iy rind of a chefnut, and not unlike th thor coat ofa hedee heg This ornament is ufed by modern archite@s i cornices of the Tonick, Corinthian, and Com{ofit ein us aba th t nex {c ral gen an order carved with anchors, darts, and oyals or eggs FiS E/ICHO. n. /. [#xe; echo, Lat. b hav t 1. Echo was fuppofe once en. |