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Show ER ER 3. Roving excurfion; irregufar courfe 2. Irregular; changeable adv [from erratical or er ratick.] Without rule; without any eftablithed method or order Thev come no fort in generations, erratically or different from each other; but in fpecifical an regular fhapes Brown [épwe. 7 ErrHUNE Snuffed up th occafioning fneezing nofe We {ee fage or betony bruifed, fneezing powder and other powders ot liquers, which the phyfician call errbinesy put into the nofe to draw phlegm fro Bacon _ the head Erro'NroUS. adf. [from erro, Latin. 1. Wandering; unfettled They roa Lrroneows and difconfolate Accufihg themfelve and their chiefs improviden Thiscircle Neawton difturbed the vifion Unblam'd abundance crowa'd the royal board What time this done rever'd her prudent lord Wh now Cowel Bitter conftraint erroneou Pope and forlorn #. Irregular; wandering from the right road If tiie veffels inftead of breaking jetts the perfon to all the inconveniences of erroseons circulation; that is, when the blood ftray into the veffels deftined to carry ferum or lymph 3. Miftaking Were deftin'd ez, nor can by fate's decre Be now cut off 5. Before; till then; till now Opene - Prior Miltor ampler heatt The Rhodians, who er/# thought themfelves a great quiet, were new overtaken with a fudden mif to truth chief Knolles Erust' cence. 7 [ [erubefcentia, LaTheir whole counfel is condemned, as havin tin.] The a& of groweither proceeded from the blindnefs of thofe times, Ervuse'scency. or from negligence, or from defire of honour an ing red; rednefs glory, or from an erromeous opinion that fuch things ERvUBESCENT adj [eru efce Lati s . might be fora while Hooker Reddifh; fomewhat red ; inclining to redA wonderful erromecus obfervation that walket nefs about, is commonly received, contrary to all th true account of time and experience Bacon, 70 ERU'CT. v. a. [erafio, Latin. 'T ‘The phznomena of light have been hithert belc t brea win fro th ftom ch explained by fuppofing that they arife from ne modifications of the rays, which is an erroneous fup- Ervcra'rion. 2 f [from eras. pofition. Neawton's Opticks. 1. The a& of belching ERRO'NEOUSLY. adv. [from erroneons.] By 2. Belch; the matter vented from the ftomach miftake; not rightly, The minds of men are erroneonfly perfuaded, tha it is the will of God to have thofe things don Hook which they fancy 1 could not difcover the lenity of this fentence but conceived it, perhaps, erroncou/ly, rather to b rigorous than gentle ErrO'NEOUSNESS 7. f The figns of the fun&ions of the ftomach bein depraved, are erucZations, either wit the aliment, acid, inodorous, or fetid Guliiver [from erroneons. Therme are hot fprings Erupi'tioN The phznomena may be explained by his hypothefis, whereof he demonftrates the truth, togethe with the erronconfne/s of ours Boyle inftruétion 3. Miftake involentar Errour is a miftake of our judgement giving affen to that which is not true Locke an act or affertion in whic a miftake is committed In religion What damned errour, but fome fober bro Will blefs it Shakefpeare's Merchant of Venice He look'd like nature's errour, as the min And body were not of a piece defign'd But made for two, and by miftake in one were join'd Dryden joined no vulgar erudition, which all your modeft s not able to conceal; for to underftand criticall the delicacies of Horace, is a heigh of our nobleman have arrived to which fe Dryden Some gentlemen, abounding in their univerfit erudition, fill their fermons with philofophical terms Saift Erv'cixous, adj. [eruginofus, Latin.] Partaking of the fubftance and nature of coppere Coppera a roug and actimoneou kin o falt, d'rawn out of ferreous and eruginous earths partaking chiefly of iron and copperj the blue o copper, the green of iron would in the abfence of all other ear an break out into bitter and paffionate erzprion f 1 Wotton's Life of B';a' It did not run out in voice or indecent eruptio but filled the foul, as God the univerfe, filentl without noife 5. Efflorefcence; puftules cured merely by outward applications rative medicines Unripe fruits are apt to occafion fou fOI'th Henr part, is i i hi % 7. ofp [ef_'y;zgz'an. Aplant._ An eryfipela a | tit Tho 7 /. [fpooimsrac] Erysi'peLAS fio is generated bya hot fer affes the fuperficies of th an with a fhining pale red, and citron colour pulfation or circumfcribed tumour, fpreadin Wifeman's one place to another fin 6 the ladd 115 and other utenfils, which were mad famous efcalade Esca'vor. 7 f Browne def f Sgfly ESCALA'DE. #. /. [French.,] The {caling the walls of a fortification In Geneva one meets wit blood 1 A *Tis liftening fear, and dumb admaz When to the ftartled eye the fudden glanc Appears far fouth erzptive through the cl'ouc‘lj th eruptions 1. A fhellfith, whofe fhell is regula dented Lgmé‘ b winkles, which have greater gravity, wer Wit W hi"; in ftone i 2. An inequality of margin; indenture The figure of the leaves is divided int ¢fealsps, curioutly indented round the edges ESCAPADE. n. /. [French. motion of a horfe g i R Ef?'d i Irregy o He with a graceful pride While his rider every hand furvey'd ,,lfl'&[ i Sprung loofe, and flew into an vtfifl?fldfl p‘m[' m{ Not moving forward, yet with every boundd Dr 6 a}&q%; Prefling, and feeming ftill to quit his ground. D1 6 To ESCA'PE. w. a. [echaper, Brench] 1. To obtain exemption from 3 L fecurit from; to fly; to avoid " ! t of pafiin_bt,: ¢fcape the purfu and perplexity of thovghis there & ROWEY T Since Xve canno a ErUP'TIVE. adj. [eruptus, Lati Ery/NGoO b h 1n ftrange eruptions Shakefpeare' An eruption of humours, in an the fkin The fhells of thofe cockles, efcalop Thrice fam'd beyond all érudition Shakefpeare The earl was of good erudition, having bee placed at ftudy in Cambridge very young. #Hotron To your experience in ftate affairs you have alf truth 2, A blunder obtained by ftudy an Fam'd by thy tutor, and thy parts of nature fro Oh, hateful erronr, melancholy's child Why do'ft thou fhew to the apt thoughts of men The things that are not Shakefpeare . f. [ernditio, Latin,] Learn ing; knowledg Latin, deviatio or fiery erauctations fuch as burft forth of the earth during earthquakes Woodward. hyfical falfehood; inconformity to truth F/RROUR. n. /. [error the tafte o Arbuthnot 3. Any fudden burft of wind or matter 4. Violent exclamation To his fecretary, whom he laid in him for natural "ventilation of his th Difeafed nature oftentimes breaks fort mine eyes Dim ¢7/#; dilated fpirits Deftruction with creation might have mix'd Milton The future few or more, howe'er they be There is the ervoneous as well as the nightly informed confecience South Lett he, incens'd at fuch eruption bold 4+ Formerly; long ago King Charles conformabl Or enemy, while God was in his wor As fignal now in fow dejected ftat As er/? in higheft, behold him. Milton's Agoniftes He taught us e1/Z the heifer's tail to view Gay Thou art far from deftroying the innocent wit the guilty, and the erromeous with the malicious Celeftial {pirits in bondage. Milton's .Pdm' l?fi Eo‘@ Such command we had To fee that none thence iffu'd fortha f Spewfer 3. Onee; when time svas mifled by errour . Miftaken; no phyfically falfe Of detraction from h#r praife Arbuthnot on. Aliments g ither, if but to pry, thall be perhap Our firft eruption, thither or elfewhere For this infernal pit thall never hol Seem'd ezff fo lavith ‘and profufe We may juttly now accuf yield, it fub 3. Sudden excurfion of an hoféfé, kind T Fame that her high worth to raife fo heav''n decrees, is doom'd to mourn for'cm fimoak, m(ilxedhwidz feveral unufual prodife gures, made their appearance. Addifon's Gyayg Ers, or Bitter Petch. n. f. [vicia valdé ama ra.] A plant Erst. adv, [erff, German; %nyza, Saxon. o Binfl 2. Atfirft; in the beginning 2. Burft; emiflion; fomethin In part of Media there are evuprio s of out of plains Bacon' Natyral Hifloy Upon a fignal given thefemptimbegan'-» judgment given in any court of record I counfel thee ik out fuddenly writ of errour, which lies to redrefs falf For fear of further harm frgm any confinement inding themfelves pent in by the eyterinn . they prefled with violenf;‘:e againfg: t it yicld and give wayto their dilat §. [In law, more efpecially in our commo An errour in pleading, or in th faw. procefs; and the writ, which is brough for remedy of this overfight, is called by being placed here, ftopped muc of the erroneons light, which otherwife would hav 1. The a@ of breaking or burtting f hu k Blood he offered for himfelf, and for the errour Heb. ix. 7 of the people Philips Of militaty chance Ervr'tron. , /. [erzfptib,‘ 'Latih.,]*.fafzm? Sin Sir knight, if knight thou be Abandon this foreftalled place at er/ i Or did you Hea¥'ns fuperiour doom obey2 Dryden 4. [In theology. choly, ‘or upon an aduft fibial or érkgi}fafij' filph What brought you living to the Stygian ftate Driv'n by the winds and erroxrs of thefea They are incommoded with a {limy mattety Eough arvey ftink of breath, and an erratick fever. Erra'ricanyry Agues depend upon a corrupt incine 24 "'TEu, o i |