Abbildungen der Seite
PDF
EPUB

Levant-sponge

B. As substantive (pron. lě-vănt'):

1. A name given to those countries, and more especially to the coasts of those countries lying on the eastern part of the Mediterranean and the neighboring seas, as Turkey, Greece, Egypt, Asia Minor, Syria, &c.

"My voiage to the Ilands of Candia and Chio in the Leuant."-Hackluyt: Voyages, ii. 92.

2. An easterly wind blowing up the Mediterra

nean.

"They are called Levants both from their course, as blowing from the East where the sun rises, and also from their freshening and rising higher as the sun rises."— Sir Henry Sheere: Lord Halifax's Miscell., p. 34.

Levant and couchant:

Law: [COUCHANT, [.]

Levant-sponge, s. [TURKEY-SPONGE.]

2511

lev-eē, v. t. [LEVEE, 8.]

1. Ord. Lang.: To attend the levees of; to court at levees.

2. Hydraul. Engin.: To embank; as, to levee a river.

lěv -el, *lev-ell, *liv-el, s. & a. [O. Fr. livel, liveau (Fr. niveau), from Latin libella = a level, dimin. of libra a level, a balance; Ital. livello, livella; Port. livel, nivel; Sp. nivel.]

A. As substantive:

I. Ordinary Language:
1. Literally:

(1) That which is level; a surface without inequalities; a plane.

A line or surface, every point in which is equally distant from the center of the earth, is a true level; a line or surface which is parallel to or coincident lě-vănt, s. [Probably the same as LEVANT, a.] with the plane of the horizon is an apparent level. A land-spring. (2) The line of direction in which a missile is aimed or sent.

[blocks in formation]

1. A native of the Levant.

2. A vessel belonging to the Levant.

II. Fabric: A particular kind of silk cloth. lě-vär -i fă -ci-ǎs (cas sh), s. [Lat. that you cause to be levied.]

Law: A writ of execution at common law, executed by the sheriff upon the goods and lands of a debtor.

lě-vā -tion, s. [Lat. levatio, from levatus, pa. par. of lero to raise.] The act of raising or elevat ing; elevation.

lě-vā -tor (pl. lev-a-tör'-ēş), s. [Lat. a lifter, from levo to lighten, to lift up.]

1. Surg. A lever for raising a depressed portion of the skull. It belongs to the trephine case. 2. Anat.: That which raises. Used specially of muscles. There are a levator anguli oris, a levator anguli scapula, a levator palati, and ten others, besides levalores costarum and levatores longiores

costarum.

*lēve (1), v. t. A shortened form of BELIEVE (q.v.).
*lēve (2), v. [LIVE, v.]
*lēve (3), t. [LEAVE, v.]
*lēve, 8. [LEAVE, 8.]

lēve, a. [LIEF.]

*leve-cel, s. [LEVESELL.]

(3) In the same senso as II. 2.
2. Figuratively:

(1) A state of equality or equal elevation with
something else.

"The time is not far off when we shall be upon the
level."-Atterbury: To Pope.

(2) The natural position or state which belongs
to anything; as, He has found his level.
3. The usual or ordinary height, elevation, rate,
or standard.

"His later productions fall below the level of his early
essays."-Stewart: Of the Human Mind, ch. v., pt. íi., § 2.
4. A state of feeling or thought.
"Our hearts, in glad surprise,
To higher levels rise."

Longfellow: Santa Filomena.
*5. A rule, plan, scheme, or motivo.
"Be the fair level of thy actions laid,
As temp'rance wills.'
Prior: Solomon, iii. 43.

[blocks in formation]

(2) An adit or drift forming a drain for water. A
level which opens to the surface at the side of a
valley is called a day-level, and forms a means of
natural drainage without pumping. A drowned or
blind level is a drainage-gallery which has the form
of an inverted siphon. A dip-head level is the one
which proceeds from the foot of the engine-shaft
right and left, and from which the rooms diverge.
(3) A gutter for water to run in.

leveler

*C. As adv.: Direct, straight.

"It shall as level to your judgment pierce As day does to your eye."

Shakesp.: Hamlet, iv. 2. (1) To do one's level best: To put forth all one's exertions.

(2) To have a level head: To possess a well-balanced mind.

*level-coil, s. An old Christmas game, in which each player hunted the other from his seat, the loser giving up his seat to the winner; hence, riotous sport of any kind. (Ben Jonson.)

level-lines, s. pl.

Shipbuild. Lines representing the boundaries of with the keel. Water-lines are drawn parallel with sections drawn at different heights and parallel the line of flotation or the true horizontal. When the ship floats on an even keel, the level-lines and water-lines coincide.

lĕv‍-el, *lěv'-ell, v. t. & i. [LEVEL, 8.]
A. Transitive:
I. Literally:

1. To make horizontal; to reduce to a horizontal
plane.
2. To bring to the same level or height with
another.
"Less bright the moon,

But opposite in level'd west was set."

Milton: P. L., vii. 376. 3. To make smooth or even; to remove the inequalities of surface in; to reduce to an even or flat surface.

"With unresisted might the monarch reigns;
He levels mountains, and he raises plains."
Dryden: Sigismonda and Guiscardo, 283.
4. To lay flat; to make level with the ground.
"Oaths divine the willing nations bound,
Ne'er to return, till our victorious pow'rs
Had level'd with the dust the Theban tow'rs."
Wilkie: Epigoniad, bk. i.
5. To point in taking aim; to raise or depress, so
as to point direct to an object; to direct straight at
an object.

"Another sign, and to the aim
Leveled at once their muskets came."
Scott: Rokeby, v. 28.

II. Figuratively:
1. To reduce or bring to an equality of state, rank,
condition, or degree.

"Reason can never assent to the admission of those

brutish appetites which would over-run the soul, and level its superior with its inferior faculties."-Decay of

Piety.

2. To aim; to direct.

"Revenge, from some baneful corner, shall level a tale
of dishonor at them."-Sterne: Tristram Shandy, ch. xii.
*3. To lay or point out exactly.

2. Surv. & Engin.: An instrument for indicating
a horizontal line or determining the position as to
horizontality of an object or surface to which it is
applied, and then determining the true level, or
the difference of rise or fall between two or more
places, for various purposes of architecture, engi-
tions of levels, varying in form, size, arrangement, or
neering, drainage, &c. There are numerous descrip-
construction, according to the purpose for which
each is intended; as, for instance, the carpenter's, a mark; as, Ho leveled at the mark.
mason's, gunner's, or surveyor's levels, the mer
curial, water, and spirit levels, &c. All may be
divided into three classes:

virtue."--Milton: Doct. of Divorce, bk. ii., ch. xiv.
"To limit and level out the direct way from vice to

4. To adopt; to accommodate; to proportion.
*B. Intransitive:

(1) The simplest, such as the mason's or carpenter's level, in which the vertical line is determine by a plumb line, and the horizontal by a line perpendicular to it.

(2) Those in which the horizontal line is determined by the surface of a fluid at rest; as in the water and mercurial levels.

(3) Those in which the horizontal line is determined by a bubble of air floating in a fluid con

levee, s. [Fr. levée a levy, &c., prop. the fem. tained in a glass tube; as a spirit level. of the pa. par. of lever to raise.] [LEVY.]

I. Ordinary Language:

1. The act or time of rising.

"I got to the seacoast time enough to be at the sun's levee."-Gray: Letter to Mr. Nicholls.

2. In the United States this term is applied to any assemblage of guests, whether held in the morning or in the evening.

3. In England the term is confined to a morning reception held by a sovereign, prince, or personage of high rank; especially the state receptions held by the sovereign, to which are admitted all whose zank, position, or office entitles them to such distinction. It differs from a drawing-room reception in the fact that to the latter ladies, as well as gentlemen, are admitted, while to the former gentlemen only are admitted.

II. Hydraul. Engin.: An embankment to restrain water, and of a magnitude such as those of the Mississippi, the Ganges, Holland, and the Po.

"All the large towns on the river have a levee."-H. A. Murray: Land of the Slave and the Free, viii.

¶ Levée en masse: [LEVY, 8.]

B. As adjective:

1. Horizontal; parallel to or coincident with the
plane of the horizon.

"Her level rays, like golden bars,
Lie on the landscape green."

Longfellow: Endymion.
2. Even or on a level with anything else; in the
same line or of the same height as something else;
not higher or lower.

"The setting sun now beams more mildly bright,
The shadows lengthening with the level light."
Beattie: Pust. 2.
3. Having no inequalities; not having any part
higher than another; not rising or falling; flat.

"See the revolution of the times
Make mountains level."

Shakesp.: Henry IV., Pt. II., iii. 1.

4. Having no gradations or difference of superiority or degree; equal in rank or degree; on an equality.

[blocks in formation]

I. Literally:

1. To aim or point a gun, &c., in a direct line with 2. To be in a direct line or in the same direction with something.

II. Figuratively:

1. To aim; to direct the aim or purpose. "Ambitious York did level at my crown."

Shakesp.: Henry VI., Pt. III., ii. 2.

2. To conjecture; to guess at.
"She leveled at our purposes.
Shakesp.: Antony and Cleopatra, v. 2.

3. To accord; to agree; to suit.

"Such accommodation and resort As levels with her breeding." Shakesp.: Othello, i. 3.

1. To level up: To raise that which is lower to a level or equality with that which is higher; specif., to raise persons of a lower class to an equality with those of a higher.

2. To level down: To lower or reduce to the same level or status.

*lēve-less, a. [LEAVELESS.]

-er.]

lěv-el-er, lěv'-el-lêr, s. [Eng. level, v.; -er. I. Ordinary Language:

1. One who or that which levels.

2. One who wishes to destroy all social distinctions; a socialist. 3. A billiard-table foot having a screw adjustment for height, in order to level the table.

4. An earth-scraper for leveling a site.

the Long Parliament about 1647 who wished to II. English Hist.: One of a party in the army of destroy all distinctions of rank and title and estab lish social equality throughout the kingdom. Cromwell put them down in 1649, imprisoning their leader, Lilburn.

sin, aş; expect, Xenophon, exist. ph = f

leveling

lěv ́-el-lịg, lěv‍-el-ling, pr. par., adj. & 8. (LEVEL, v.]

A & B. As pr. par. & particip. adj.: (See the verb.)

C. As substantive:

1. The act of making level or reducing to a level; the act of pulling down to the ground.

2. The act or process of ascertaining the level or height of any place, point, or spot.

leveling-block, s. A leveling platform, consisting of large iron plates laid together and secured. The respective plates may be 8 or 10 feet long, 5 or 6 wide, and 6 inches thick. They are completely covered with holes, about 1 inches in diameter and 4 or 5 inches apart from center to center. The mold of a given frame having been laid on the leveling-block, the figure of the molding edge is marked on it with chalk, and iron pins are stuck in the holes, so that when the iron rib is made to touch those pins it will have the proper form. In order the more easily to produce any required figure, the heads of the pins are furnished with eccentric discs or cams, by the moving and turning of which the figure of the frame can be adjusted with great precision. Each disc has several center-holes, any one of which can be fitted on the pin. The iron bar of the frame, having been raised to a bright orange heat in a reverberatory furnace, called a reheating furnace, is taken out by the smiths, laid on the leveling-block, and rapidly bent by means of tongs, hammers, mallets, and lovers, so as to lie touching the heads of the pins.

leveling-rod, s. The same as LEVELING-STAFF (q. v.).

leveling-staff, s. An instrument, one form of which consists of two strips 6% feet long, united by a longitudinal tenon and mortise so as to slide on each other and extend to a length of twelve feet. The divisions are in feet, inches, and fractions, and count from the bottom. A cross-piece or vane slides on the staff, and has an aperture to enable the staff graduations to be read.

leveling-stand, s.

Photog.: An instrument used to support a glass plate in a horizontal position, so that it shall retain developing or other fluids upon its upper surface. Its usual form is a tripod, of suitable height to stand in the developing-trough, with three adjusting-screws by which the operation of leveling is accomplished.

lev-el-işm, s. [English level; -ism.] The act, principle, or theory of reducing distinctions in society to an equality.

lěv -el-ly, adv. [Eng. level; ly.] In a level manner; evenly.

"Neither would praises and actions appear so levelly concurrent in many other of the Grecians, as they do in these."-Hobbes: Thucydides, bk. ii.

lev-el-ness, s. [Eng. level; -ness.] The quality or state of being level; evenness; equality of surface or height.

*lěv -en (1), 8. [LEAVEN, 8.] lěv -ẹn (2), s. [LEVIN.] lev-en (3), 8. [LAWN.] A lawn; an open space

between woods.

lē'-ver (1), *lē'-vour, s. [Fr. leveur a raiser or lifter; also levier a lever, from Lat. levatorem, accus. of levator=a lifter, from levatus, pa. par. of lero-to lift, to make light; levis-light.]

1. Mech.: A bar of wood, metal, or other rigid substance, having a fixed point (or fulcrum), and used to overcome a certain resistance (or weight) at some part of the bar by means of a force (or power) applied at another part. The parts of the lever into which the fulcrum divides it are called the arms of the lever. When the arms are in the same straight line the lever is called a straight lever; in other cases it is called a bent lever. The plane in which the lever can move may be called the plane of the lever. The forces which act on the lever are supposed to act in the plane of the lever.

[blocks in formation]

2512

weight act on opposite sides of the fulcrum. In the second class the power and the weight act on the same side of the fulcrum, the weight being the nearer to the fulcrum. In the third class the power and the weight act on the same side of the fulcrum, the power being the pearer to the fulcrum. Thus we may say briefly that the three classes have respectively the fulcrum, the weight, and the power in the middle position. The following are examples of levers of the first class: A crowbar used to raise a heavy weight, a poker used to raise coals in a grate, the handle of a pump. In scissors, shears, nippers, and pincers we have examples of a double lever of the first class. The oar of a boat furnishes an example of a lever of the second class. The fulcrum is at the blade of the oar in the water; the power is applied by the hand; the weight is applied at the row-lock. A pair of nutcrackers is a double lever of the second class. A pair of tongs used to hold a coal is a double lever of the third class. The fulcrum is the pivot on which the two parts of the instrument turn; the power is the pressure applied by the hand; the weight is the resistance of the coal at the end of the tongs. An example of the third class of lever is seen in the human forearm employed to raise an object taken in the hand. The fulcrum is at the elbow; the power is exerted by a muscle which comes from the upper part of the arm, and is inserted in the forearm near the elbow; the weight is the object raised in the hand. 2. Horology:

(1) A form of escapement. [Lever escapemENT.] (2) A watch having a lever-escapement; a lever watch.

[blocks in formation]

lever-escapement, s.

Horol.: A form of escapement in which the lever vibrates on a center and carries the pallets (or anchor), and its forked end alternately engages with and is engaged by a ruby pin attached to a disc on the balance-arbor. The lever or fork, having the impulse given to it from the wheel, and then striking against the ruby pin, gives the motion to the balance from which it was disengaged, till brought back by the hair-spring; the ruby pin then strikes the fork and disengages the wheel, thus allowing it to go on. This causes two distinct beats. lever-hoist, s.

Mech. A contrivance for converting a reciprocating circular into a continuous rectilinear motion. lever-jack, s. A form of hoist having a lever, post, and pawl, in which the lever engages with a rack. [LIFTING-JACK.]

lever-obstetric, s.

Surg.: [LEVER, II. 4.]

lever-press, s. One of the simplest and most evident forms of pressing apparatus. It assumes

many forms: cider-presses, lard or tallow squeezers, and cheese-presses, are constructed to obtain pressure by a lever, which is depressed by a suspended weight, by tackle, or by a screw. lever-punch, s. ing motion of two cam-faced levers which are drawn A punch operated by the rolltogether by a screw.

lever-valve, s. A safety-valve kept in its seat by the pressure of a lever with an adjustable weight, the invention of Dr. Papin, of Blois. In locomotives a spring is used at the end of the lever instead of a weight, the pressure being regulated by a screw and indicated on a brass plate. lever-watch, s. A watch having a lever escape

ment.

lever (2), s. [A corruption of louvre (q. v.).]
lěv-ĕr-boardş, s. pl. [LOUVRE-BOARDS.]
*lē -věr, a. & adv. [LIEF.]

A. As adjective: More agreeable, more pleasant; dearer.

B. As adv.: More willingly, more gladly; rather. le-ver, v. t. [LEVER (1), s.] To act upon or force with a lever.

lē -ver-age (age as Ig), s. [English lever (1), -age.]

1. The action of a lever; that arrangement of parts by which lever power is gained.

2. The mechanical power gained by the use of a lever.

lěv er ět, *lyv-er-et, s. [O. Fr. levrault, from Lat, leporem, accus. of lepus=a hare; Fr. levrette, dimin. of lièvre (O. Fr. levre)=a hare.] A hare in its first year; a young hare.

levirate

lev-er-ock, lev-er-ook, lav-er-ock, s. [LavEROCK.] A lark (q. v.). lē-ver-wood, s. [Eng. lever, and wood.] Bot.: Ostrya virginica.

*leve-sell, leve-cel, *lef-sal, *lefe-sale, 8. [A. S. leaf leaf, and sal, sel-a room, a hall; Sw. löfsal; Dá. lovsal=a hut of branches with foliage on.] 1. A lattice; a lattice-window.

window, &c. 2. A pent-house; a projecting roof over a door, 3. An open shed.

*lěv -ět, s. [Fr. lever to raise, to arouse.] Mil. The morning call on the trumpet, by which soldiers are aroused; a reveille,

-able.] Capable of being levied or collected; that lěv -I-a-ble, *lěv -ě-a-ble, a. [Eng. levy, v.: may be assessed and levied.

lě-vi-a-than, s. [Low Lat., from Heb. livyathan leviathan (see def.), livyah=a garland, a wreath; leviathan then the wreathed animal, from twisting itself into wreaths or folds.]

[blocks in formation]

II. Technically: 1. Scripture:

(1) The crocodile of the Nile (Job xli., and the margin of iii. 8, or fig. "Pharaoh," King of Egypt, Psalm lxxiv. 14). [PHARAOH.]

(Psalm civ. 26). (2) Some cetacean, inhabiting the Mediterranean (3) A real or imaginary sea-serpent (?) (Isaiah xxvii. 1).

2. Mythol.: Any great sea monster. lĕv'-led, pa. par. or a. [LEVY, v.] lev-lg-a-ble, a. [Lat. levig(0)= to make smooth, or ground down to a fine powder. to polish; Eng. -able.] That may or can be rubbed

lěv -I-gate, v. t. [LEVIGATE (1), a.]

1. Ord. Lang.: To make smooth; to plane, to polish, to ease.

2. Chem. & Pharm.: To grind or rub down to an impalpable powder.

lev -I-gate, (1), læ-vi-gate, læ'-vi-găt-ěd a. [Lat. levigatus, pa. par. of levigo-to make smooth, from levis smooth.

1. Ord. Lang.: Made smooth or polished.

2. Bot.: Having the appearance of being polished, as many seeds.

*lěv -I-gate (2), a. [Lat. levigatus, pa. par. of lighter; lightened, softened. levigo to make light; lèvis=light.] Made light or

lěv-i-gā -tion, s. [Lat. levigatio, from levigatus, pa. par. of levigo to make smooth.] [LEVIGATE, v.] The process of rubbing a moist material between two hard surfaces, as in grinding pigments and printer's ink.

lě-vig-li-a-nīte, s. [Named after the place where found, Levigliani; suff. -ite (Min.).]

Min.: D'Achiardi gave this name provisionally to a mineral which he regarded as a ferriferous variety of Guadalcazarite (q. v.). Subsequent examinamore zinc and iron. From the mercury mine of tion showed that it contained no selenium, and Levigliani, near Serravezza, Italy.

*lěv -In, *lĕav'-en, *lev-en, *lev-ene, s. [Etym. doubtful.] Lightning.

*levin-brand, s. A thunder-bolt. lev-in-er, s. [Etym. doubtful.] A swift species of hound.

daer a husband's brother, a brother-in-law.] lē-vir, s. [Lat., cogn. with Sansc. devar; Gr.

Anthrop.: One upon whom devolves the obligation of marrying the widow of, and thus begetting issue to, a deceased brother or near relation. lē -vir-āte, s. & a. [Fr. lévirat.] [LEVIR.] A. As substantive:

1. Jewish History: The Mosaic law binding the brother of a man dying without issue to marry the Where there were several widow (Deut. xxv. 5). brothers, the lot probably fell to the eldest; failing the nearest kinsman (Ruth iii. iv.). The only exbrothers, the marriage was in honor incumbent on bound to marry a virgin (Levit. xxi. 13, 14). The ception was in the case of the high-priest, who was first-born son of the second marriage was considered the son of the deceased, "that his name be not put out of Israel" (Deut. xxv. 6). This law was not strictly obligatory; but the man who refused to obey it was publicly dishonored (Deut. xxv. 7-10). How ancient the custom was among the Jews may be seen from the case of Tamar (Gen. xxviii. 6-30). pine, pit, sïre, sîr, marîne; gō, pot,

fate, făt, färe, amidst, what, fâll, father; wē, wět, hëre, camel, her, thêre;

leviratical

It still exists among Jews in the East; in the
West they are, of course, bound by the marriage
laws of the country in which they reside. The levi-
rate is mentioned by the Synoptists as giving rise
to a question proposed to Jesus by the Sadducees
concerning the resurrection (Matt. xxii. 23-33;
Mark xii. 18-27; Luke xx. 27-38).

2. Anthrop.: (See extract.)

"The system of Levirate, under which, at a man's
death, his wife or wives pass to his brother, is, I think,
more intimately connected with the rights of property
than with polyandry. This custom is widely distributed.
It is found, for instance, among the Mongols (Wuttke's
Ges. der Mensch., i. 223) and Kaffirs (Arbousset: Tour, pp.
38, 138), and in Yucatan (Bancroft: Native Races, ii. 671).
When an elder brother dies,' says Livingstone (Travels,
p. 185), 'the same thing occurs in respect of his wives; the
brother next in age takes them, as among the Jews, and
the children that may be born of these women he calls his
brothers also.' In India among the Nairs, a man always
takes to wife, by the custom called Sagai, his elder
brother's widow' (Dalton: Des. Ethn. Bengal, p. 138).
Among the Pacific Islanders, Mr. Brenchley mentions
that in Erromango the wives of deceased brothers fall to
the eldest surviving brother' (Cruise of the Curacoa, p.
319). Similar statements have been made also as regards
some of the Negro tribes, the Mexicans, Samoans, New
Zealanders, and Khyens."
."—Lubbock: Orig. of Civilization
(1882), pp. 141, 142.

B. As adj.: Pertaining to, observing, or in any
way connected with the system of marriage de-

scribed under A.

2513

allusion to Judges xviii. Dryden, in his Absalom
and Achitophel, applies the name Levites to the
Puritan clergy who lost their benefices in 1662
through the provisions of the Act of Uniformity.
from Gr. Levitikos, from Levites=a Levite (q. v.). ;
Lě-vit-ic-al, *Lě-vit-ic, a. [Lat. Leviticus,
Fr. lévitique.]

the Levites.
1. Of or pertaining to the Levites; connected with
institution."-Spelman:

"According to the Levitical
Rights of the Church, ch. xxvi.
*2. Priestly.

Levitical-degrees, s. pl. Those degrees of kin-
dred within which persons are forbidden to marry
(Lev. xviii. 6-18).

Lě-vit-ic-al-ly, adv. [English Levitical; -ly.]
After the manner of the Levites; according to the
Mosaic law.

Lě-vit-i-cus, s. [Lat. Leviticus (Vulgate); Gr.
(Levitikon).]

Old Test. Canon: The third book of the Penta-
teuch and of the Old Testament, in the Hebrew
Bible named (Vaiyiqra)=“ And called," from its
first two words. It prescribes laws regarding sac-
rifices (ch. i.-vii.), narrates the consecration of
Aaron and his sons as priests (viii. ix.), with the
deaths of Nadab and Abihu (x. 20), draws distinc-
tions between clean and unclean animals (xi.),
birth (xii.), from leprosy, &c. (xiii., xiv., xv.), the
makes regulations as to purification after child-
great day of atonement, &c. (xvi., xvii.), marriages,
&c. (xviii.-xx.), and priestly duties (xxi.-xxii.), the
lĕv-1-răt-ic-al, a. [Eng. levirat(e); -ical.] The great festivals (xxiii.), tabernacle worship, &c.
same as LEVIRATE, a. (q. v.)
(xxiv.), social arrangements (xxv.), and vows and
tithes (xxvii.). Intercalated into these is a chapter,
A. Trans.: To make buoyant, so as to float in the which makes Divino promises to the people if they
observe the several laws, and denouncing vengeance
air; a term used by spiritualists.
on them if they disobey (xxvi.; cf. with Deut.
xxviii.).

"Provision is made for the rights of succession of the
Levirate union."-J. F. McLennan: Studies in Ancient His-
tory, p. 161.

lěv-I-tāte, v. t. & i. [LEVITATION.]

B. Intrans.: To become light or buoyant, so as to
float in the air.

$ 4.

"A provision, distinguishingly calculated for the same
purpose of levitation."-Paley: Natural Theology, ch. xii.,
lěv-I-tā -tion, s. [Lat. levitas (genit. levitatis),
from levis-light.]
*1. The act of making light; lightness, buoyancy.
2. Among spiritualists a name given to the alleged
phenomenon of bodies naturally heavier than air
becoming buoyant, and floating in the atmosphere

The integrity of the work is admitted by most
critics, though rationalists contend that the Levit-
ical legislation did not originate till 1,000 years after
Moses, and was not carried out till after the build-
ing of the second temple. One of them contends
that Ezekiel was the author of Leviticus xxvi., and
probably of xviii.-xx., and that xviii.-xxvii. form
a section by themselves distinct from the remainder
of the book, and written in the same circle, though
not by the same hand. The rest of Leviticus is at-
tributed to priests during or after the captivity. A
the rest, but all must have been in their place before
the issue of the Samaritan Pentateuch B. C. about
338, for it has them just as we find them now.
The best commentary on the book of Leviticus is
the Epistle to the Hebrews, and the other New
Testament books. Carrying out the teaching of
Heb. ix., X., &c., the Christian Church believes that
nearly every sacrifice or other ceremony typified
the sacrifice of Christ and at his death waxed
old," and was "ready to vanish away" (Heb.
viii. 13).

lewdly

3. To collect by assessment; to raise, as a toll, a
tax, a contribution, &c.

"Taxes used to be levied upon the persons and goods of
travelers, when they passed through certain manors."-
Smith: Wealth of Nations, bk. iii., ch. iii.
4. To raise; to cause in any way.
"A grace

That, quite eclipsing pleasure's painted face,
Levied a tax of wonder and applause."
Cowper: Table Talk, 650.

II. Law:

1. To raise, to erect; as, to levy a ditch, to levy a
house.

2. To seize in execution or by way of distress; as,
to levy a distress.

1. To levy war: To raise or begin a war; to take
up arms; to make an attack.

"Yet the thought of war, which wise men saw actually
levied upon the king already, was much abhorred."-
Clarendon: Civil War, i. 693.

2. To levy a fine: To commence and carry on a
suit for assuring the title to lands or tenements.
(Eng.)

lěvy, s. [Fr. levée, from lever; Lat. levo = to
raise.]

I. Ordinary Language:

public service, or for private associations, such as
1. The act of levying, raising, or collecting for
trades-unions.

"Delegates promised that a levy of half-a-crown per
man should be made."-London Daily News, July 19, 1883.
2. That which is levied, raised, or collected.
"Ere the moon had sunk to rest

Of that rash lery nought remained.""
Wordsworth: White Doe of Rylstone, iv.

3. A small coin, or its value, being twelve and a
half cents.

II. Law: The act of collecting or seizing on exe-
cution.

Levy in mass [Fr. levée en masse]: The act of
levying or raising all the able-bodied men of a
country for military service.

lěv -ýne, lěv'-yn-īte, s. [Named by Brewster,
after the mineralogist and crystallographer, A.
Lévy; suff. -ine, -ite (Min.).]

Min.: A mineral belonging to the Zeolite group.
Crystallization regarded as rhombohedral, and
twinned as in chabasite, but Becker, who has
chabasite, has come to the conclusion that the
well-known optical anomalies of these minerals are
referable to a complicated twinning of individual
crystals belonging to the triclinic system. Hard-
ness, 4-45; specific gravity, 2:09-2:16. Luster, vit-
reous; colorless, white to grayish; transparent to
translucent. Composition: a hydrated silicate of
alumina, lime, soda, and potash, represented by the
formula 3SiO2Al2O3(Ca Na K)O34HO. Lines cavi-
ties in amygdaloidal dolerites in Iceland, Faroe,
Co. Antrim (Ireland), and Greenland.

Heb. pl. levim Levites, from Levi (1) a joining,
Le-vite, s. [Lat. pl. Levita; Gr. pl. Leuitai; few passages may, it is stated, have been later than made a minute study of this mineral, as well as of
(2) Levi: Eng., &c., suff. -ite.]
1. Script. Hist., &c. (pl.): The descendants of
Levi, one of the twelve sons of Jacob (Gen. xxix.34).
Moses and Aaron were of Levite extraction (Exod.
ii. 1-10, iv. 14), and when the descendants of Aaron
were formally set apart to perpetuate the priest.
hood, the other Levites were designated as a sacred
caste to assist in the work of the sanctuary (Num.

iii. 5-13, xvii. 2-8).

The chief branches of the
Levites were the Kohathites, the Gershomites, and
the Merarites (Num. iii., iv.). To these separate
functions were assigned, the more important being
intrusted to the Kohathites, among whom were
Moses and Aaron (1 Chron. vi. 1-3). The Levites
took office at 25 years old (Num. viii. 24, 25), or at 30,
and had to resign at 50 (Num. iv. 3, 23, 30-39, 43-47).
They were consecrated to their office (Num. viii.
5-26). They were to have no tribal territory;
Jehovah was to be their inheritance (Num. xviii.
20, xxvi. 62; Deut. x. 9, xviii. 2; Josh. xviii. 7). But
special cities were to be assigned to them, so
scattered over the country as to enable them to
render ecclesiastical and spiritual service to all the
tribes (Josh. xxi.).

The six cities of refuge were all Levitical cities
(Num. Xxxv. 1-8).

They were to be supported by tithes, but them-
selves were to pay tithes to the priesthood (Num.
xviii. 21-24, 26-32; Neh. x.37). The Levites obtained
much respect under Moses and Joshua. At the
time of the judges their social position greatly
declined (Judges xviii.). They revived under
Samuel, but declined under Saul; David reorgan-
ized them, assigning 24,000 to assist the priests,
4,000 to be musicians, 4,000 to be gatekeepers, and
6.000 for other duties (1 Chron. xxiii.-xxvi.). The
religious schism which followed on the revolt of the
ten tribes superseded the Levites over the whole
kingdom of Israel, on which multitudes of them

removed to Judah (2 Chron. xi. 13. 14, xiii. 9), exert-
ing a great influence, spiritual, social, and political,
through every subsequent change, till the destruc-
tion of Jerusalem under Titus. The office of the
Levites made them the intellectual as well as the
Spiritual caste.

The only mention of Levites in the New Testament
is in the Parable of the Good Samaritan (Luke

x. 3).

*2. Fig. In the latter part of the seventeenth
century in England, a wandering curate or a noble-
Ian's or gentleman's chaplain, looked on as one
of the servants, was often called a Levite, in
çell, chorus,

boil, boy; pout, jowl; cat,

158

lěv -I-ty, *lev-i-tie, s. [Lat. levitatem, acc. of
levitas = lightness; levis = light; Ital. levità; Sp.
levedad.]

1. Lit. The quality or state of being light; want
or absence of weight, as compared with something
else.

2. Fig.: Lightness of disposition, conduct, or
manner; want of consideration or seriousness; a
disposition to trifling; thoughtlessness, unsteadi-
ness, fickleness, changeableness, volatility.

lē vo-, pref. [For this prefix and compounds,
see LEVO.]

Eng. suff. in.]
lev-u-lin, s. [Lat. lævu(s);

connect., and

[blocks in formation]

*1. To desist from, to give up, to abandon.
"Euphranor, having levied the siege from this one only,
forthwith led his army to Demetrias."-P. Holland: Livy,
p. 1,178.

2. To raise, to collect, to gather together, as a
force of war.
"Let's levy men, and beat him back again."
Shakesp.: Henry VI., Pt. III., iv. 8.
chin, bench; go, gem; thin, this;

*lew, *lewe (ew as û or û), adj. [LUKEWARM.]
Tepid, lukewarm.

"For thou art lewe, and neither coold neither hoot."-
Wycliffe: Apocalips iii.

lewd (ew as ù or û), *lewed, *lewid, a. [A. S.
of lawan to weaken.]
lawed lay, belonging to the laity, properly pa. par.

*1. Lay; belonging to the laity; laic; not clerical.
2. Unlearned, as if connected with the English
lay or the Gr. idiōtēs.

"As necessary for the lewd as the learned."-A Short
Catechism. (1553.)
*3. Foolish, simple, silly.

"Love, my lewd pilott, hath a restlesse mind."
Spenser: F. Q., III. iv. 9.
*4. Simple, common, ordinary; not requiring skill
or learning.

"The rest he rewarded, ech according to the lewde ser-

vice they did."-Savile: Tacitus; Hist., p. 169.

5. Vicious without particularizing the nature of
the vice; profligate.

"But the Jews which believed not, moved with envy,
fellows of the baser sort."—Acts xvii. 5.
took unto them certain lewd [Gr. ponérous, Vulg. malos]

S. Wanton, lascivious; given to indulgence in
lust; dissolute, lustful,

7. Characterized by lewdness or profligacy; un-
chaste, dissolute.

"Perverting often, by the stress of lewd
And loose example, whom he should instruct."
Cowper: Task, ii. 551.
8, Proceeding from lewdness or unlawful lust.
lewd-ly (ew as u or û), *lewed-ly, udv. [Eng.
lewd; -ly.]
*1. Ignorantly; without learning: simply.
#2. Wickedly, naughtily.

[blocks in formation]

lewdness

3. Grossly, coarsely, obscenely.

"His name is Falstaff: if that man should be lewdly given, he deceiveth me."-Shakesp.: Henry IV., Pt. II., ii. 4.

4. With an unlawful indulgence in lust. (Ezekiel xxii. 11.)

lewd -ness (ew as u or û), s. [Eng. lewd; -ness.] *1. Want of learning; ignorance, illiteracy, simplicity.

"Thinges that ben made more subtlely

Than they can in their lewednesse comprehend."
Chaucer: C. T., 10,537.

*2. Vice, without particularizing its nature; prof-
ligacy.
3. Wantonness, lasciviousness, unchastity, lech-
ery, sensuality.

"That all women may be taught not to do after your lewdness."-Ezekiel xxiii. 48.

*lewds-by (ew as u or û), s. [LEWD.] A lewd or lecherous person, a profligate, a debaucher. *lewd-ster (ew as u or û), s. [Eng. lewd; suff. -ster.] A lewd person, a lecher, a libertine, a profli

gate.

"Against such lewdsters and their lechery,
Those that betray them do no treachery.'
Shakesp.: Merry Wives of Windsor, v. 3.

lew -Is, lew-is-son (ew as û), s. (See def.)
1. Mech.: A contrivance for lifting stones which
was used by the ancient Romans, and the peculiar
mortise marks are found in the
stones of

the Flavian amphitheater. It received its name from a Frenchman who brought it to its present form. He was an architect on the works of Louis XIV., and gave it the name it bears in compliment to his master. It consists of two dovetail tenons, which are expanded by a key in a dovetail mortise in the stone, and shackled to the hoisting-chain. The dovetail pieces are first inserted, and then forced apart by the middle key, so as to occupy the undercut portion of the mortise. All three are then shackled to the lifting-chain.

Lewis.

2. Cloth. A kind of shears used in cropping woolen cloth.

lewis-bolt, s. A wedge-shaped bolt secured in
its socket by lead, and used as a lewis in lifting.
lex, 8. [Lat.] Law.

T (1) Lex mercatoria: Mercantile law.
(2) Lex non scripta: The unwritten or common

law of the land.

(3) Lex scripta: Statute law.

(4) Lex talionis: The law or principle of retaliation; the law directing that the punishment shall be of the same nature as the crime; as, an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, &c. lex-i-cal, a. [Gr. lexikos of or pertaining to words.]

1. Of or pertaining to a dictionary or lexicon; of or pertaining to words.

2. Of the nature of a dictionary or lexicon.

2514

or explanation of the meaning of each; a dictionary,
Lexicon was originally, and is still
a word-book.
chiefly applied to dictionaries of the Greek or He-
brew languages.

"The lexicons of ancient tongues, now immutably fixed,
and comprised in a few volumes."-Johnson: Pref. to the
English Dict.

flex-I-con-Ist, s. [English lexicon; -ist.] The author or compiler of a lexicon or dictionary; a lexicographer.

lex-i-grǎph'-Ic, *lex-I-grăph'-ic-al, a. [Eng. lexigraph(y); -ic, -ical.] Of or pertaining to lexigraphy.

lex-i-graph-y, s. [Gr. lexis=a saying, a word, and grapho to write.] The art or practice of defining words.

lex-I-phǎn'-ic, adj. [Gr. lexiphanës grandiloquent, from lexis a saying, a speech, and phainō= to show.] Bombastic, turgid, pompous.

lex-I-phăn ́-i-çişm, s. [Eng. lexiphanic; -ism.] The act or habit of using pompous or bombastic language; bombast; pompous, or high-sounding language.

[blocks in formation]

Leyden-battery, s.

Electricity: A number of Leyden jars connected externally by resting on a metallic surface, and internally by rods and wires.

Leyden-jar, Leyden-phial, s.

Elect.: A glass bottle having its interior coated with tin foil or filled with thin leaves of copper or of gold leaf. The outside is also coated with tin foil up to a certain distance from the neck. The neck has a cork, through which passes a brass rod terminating at one end in a knob, and communicating with the metal in the interior. The inner coating is called the internal, and the outer one the external armature or coating. It is charged by connecting one of the armatures with the ground and the other with the source of electricity. If the hand grasps the external coating while the knob is presented to the conductor of the machine, positive electricity accumulates on the inner, and negative electricity on the outer coating. If, on the contrary, the jar be held by the knob and the outer tricity is accumulated on the outer, and negative on the inner coating.

lex-i-cal-lỹ, adv. [Eng. lexical; -ly.] Accord- coating be presented to the machine, positive elec

ing to lexicography; by means of a lexicon.

lex-i-cog'-ra-pher, s. [Gr. lexikon = a lexicon, and grapho to write; Fr. lexicographe.] One who writes or compiles a lexicon or dictionary; the author or compiler of a dictionary.

lĕx-I-co-graph-ic, lex-i-co-grăph -ic-al, a. [Gr. lexikon = a lexicon, and Eng. graphic, graph ical (q. v.).] Of or pertaining to lexicography or the compilation of a dictionary.

*lex-i-cog-ra-phist, s. [Eng. lexicograph(y); -ist.] A lexicographer.

"The good old lexicographist, Adam Littleton."Southey: The Doctor, ch. 184.

lex-i-cog-ra-phy, s. and grapho to write.]

[Gr. lexikon a lexicon,

1. The act or occupation of writing or compiling a lexicon or dictionary.

2. The principles upon which a lexicon or dictionary should be compiled or based; the art or science of compiling a dictionary.

lex-I-col-o-gist, s. [English lexicology); -ist.] One versed in lexicology; one who writes or compiles dictionaries; a lexicographer.

lex-i-col-o-ġỷ, s. [Gr. lexikos pertaining to words, and logos a discourse, a treatise.] That branch of learning which treats of the proper signification and application of words; the science of words, their derivation and signification.

lex-i-con, 8. [Gr. lexikon (biblion)=(a book) pertaining to words; lexikos of or pertaining to words; lexis a saying, a speech; lego to speak, to say. A vocabulary or alphabetical list of the words in a language, together with the definition

leys'-ser-a, s. [Named after Frederick William
Leyser, a German botanist.]

Bot. The typical genus of the sub-tribe Leyssereæ.
It consists of three or four African herbs or under-
shrubs, with a solitary yellow head of flowers.
leys-sĕr-ě-æ, s. pl. [Mod. Lat, leyssera, and
Lat. fem. pl. adj. suff. -ec.]
Bot.: A sub-tribe of Composites, tribe Seneci-
onida.

lēze măj-es-ty, 8. [Fr. lèse-majesté = high
treason, from Lat. læsa majestas, from læsa, fem.
sing. of losus, pa. par of lado to hurt, and majestas
majesty, power.]

Law: Treason; a crime committed or attempted to be committed, against the sovereign power in a state. Among the Romans, crimen læsæ majestatis was a charge of treason, rebellion, or usurpation of office, which were considered as offenses against the majesty of the Roman people.

lherz-o-lite (z as tz), 8. [Named from the Etang de Lherz, in the Eastern Pyrenees, where it occurs.]

Petrol.: A granular or crystalline-granular aggre-
gate of olivine, eustatite, diopside, and picotite,
the olivine being the dominant constituent. Besides
the Pyrenees, it is found also in the Tyrol, in Nor-
way, &c. (Rutley.)

lhot -sky-a, s. [Named after Dr. John Lhotsky,
a German botanical collector.]
Bot.: A genus of Chamalauciace (Fringe
Myrtles). It consists of three or four African
shrubs, with yellow or violet heads of flowers.

lî, s. [Chinese.]

Lias

1. A Chinese copper coin, also called a cash v.).

2. A Chinese measure of length, equal to 486 inch.

li-a-be-æ, s. pl. [Mod. Lat. liab(um); Lat. fem. pl. adj. suff. -ec.]

Bot.: A sub-tribe of Composites, tribe Vernoniaceae.

* li-a-bil'-i-tỷ, s. [Eng, liable; -ity.]

1. The quality or state of being liable, responsible, or bound in law or justice; responsibility. 2. The quality or state, of being liable, exposed, or subject to anything; exposedness, tendency; as, a liability to disease, a liability to accidents. 3. That for which one is liable; specif. (pl.), the debts or pecuniary engagements for which one is liable.

li-a-ble, *ly-a-ble, a. [Fr. lier to tie, to bind, to oblige; suff. -able; Lat. ligo-to tie, to bind.] *1. Allied, associated, connected.

"If my name were liable to fear."

Shakesp.: Julius Cæsar, i. 2 2. Bound or obliged in law or equity; responsible, answerable; bound to make good loss or depreciation in anything; as, to be liable for the debts of another.

3. Subject or having a tendency to; exposed; apt or likely to catch or suffer from: as, to be liable to fall, to be liable to illness. (Only used of what is dangerous and hurtful.)

"So implicated in guilt, so lyable to wrath."-Barrow: Sermons, vol. ii., ser. 5.

*4. Subject, subordinate.

"Reason to my love is liable."

*5. Fit, suitable.

Shakesp.: Julius Cæsar, ii. 2

"Apt, liable to be employed in danger." Shakesp.: King John, iv. 2. li-a-ble-ness, s. [English liable; -ness.] The quality or state of being liable; liability. lî-à-bŭm, s. [Meaning unknown.]

Bot.: The typical genus of the sub-tribe Liabe (q. v.). The species are found in South America. lia-fail, s. [Gael.=stone of destiny: lia=stone. and fail (for faidheil) = fate, destiny.] (See extract.) [JACOB'S-STONE.]

"The lia fail, or, as some call it, the ling fhil, or leng fail, was the fatal chair on which the supreme kings of Ireland were inaugurated in the days of Druidism. From Ireland it was conveyed to Dunstaffnage in Scotland; thence, about the year 842, to Scone, by Kenneth II.;and. lastly, in 1300, by Edward I. to Westminster, where it still remains. How the lia fùil came to Scotland, whether by theft, fraud, or violence, is not ascertained. It is said to have possessed extraordinary virtues till the time of our Some time after its arrival in Scotland, Saviour's birth.

a superstitious belief became attached to it-that wherever the stone should be found, some one of the race should reign. This persuasion is not so old as the times of Druidism."-Armstrong: Gaelic Dictionary.

*li-age (age as ig), s. [French, from lier; Lat. ligo-to bind.] A league, an alliance.

11-ai-şoǹ, s. [Fr., from Lat. ligationem, accus. of ligatio-a binding, from ligatus, pa. par. of ligo to bind.]

I. Ordinary Language:

1. A union, a bond, an entanglement.

2. An illicit intimacy between a man and woman. II. Cookery: A thickening, generally of beaten eggs, sometimes of cream and eggs, intended to bind together the component parts of a dish.

lî-a-na, lî-ane, s. [French liane, from lier=to bind.] The name given to the climbing and creeping plants, belonging to many different families, which abound in the forests of tropical America.

li-ar, *ly-ar, s. [A. S. leógere, from leógan=to lie.] [LIE (1), v.] One who tells lies; one who deliberately states as a fact that which he knows not to be true; one who knowingly utters falsehoods.

li-ard, *ly-arde, a. & s. [O. Fr. liart, from Low Lat. liardus dapple-gray.]

A. As adjective:

*1. Of a roan or dappled color.

2. Gray; gray-headed; as, a liard old man. *B. As subst.: A horse; properly one of a dapplegray color.

*lî ́-ard (d silent), s. [Fr.] A French farthing. li-art, *ly-art, a. [LIARD, a.]

Li-as, s. [By some considered a corruption of the English word layers, or lyers, referring to the visible stratification of the rock. But Mahn and Skeat think that the Fr. liais=the rocks in question. was the origin of the English word. Littré, on the other hand, derives the Fr. lias from the English term though saying that some consider it to have sir, marîne; gō, põt,

fate, făt, färe, amidst, what, fâll, father; wē, wět, hëre, camel, her, thêre; pine, pit, sïre,

Liassic

come from Bas Breton liach dolmen. The English word lias was first a provincial one, adopted by geologists, who gave it universal currency.]

1. Geol. A formation situated at the base of the Oolite, with which it is sometimes combined. It consists of thin beds of blue or gray limestone, becoming light-brown when weathered. These are separated by dark-colored, narrow, argillaceous partings, so that quarries of the rock seen from a distance look striped and ribbon-like. Most of its fossils are marine, though there is in it an insectlimestone. Huge Enaliosaurians, specially Ichthyosaurs and Plesiosaurs, reach their maximum development in it; they are believed to have been

marine.

2. Comm., &c.: Liassic clays are used for brickmaking. They are also burnt for lime and for hydraulic cement; liassic limestones are called cement stones, and are burnt for hydraulic lime. (Rutley.)

Li-as-sic, a. [Eng. lias; -ic.] Of or pertaining to the lias formation; of the age of the lias forma

tion.

li-a-tris, subst. [A word of unknown meaning (Loudon.).]

Botany: A genus of Composites, sub-tribe Adenostyleæ. Liatris squamosa has beautiful purple flowers. It is known in this country as is L.scariosa, as the Rattlesnake's Master, the bruised bulbs of the plant being applied to the wound, while a decoction of the milk is taken inwardly. (Loudon.) lib, v. t. [A. S. *lybban; cogn. with Dut. lubben = to castrate.] [GLIB, v.] To castrate, to geld. *lib -a-ment, s. [Lat. libamentum, from libo=to pour out.] A libation.

*li-bant, a. [Lat. libans, pa. par. of libo to sip, to pour out.] Sipping, tasting; touching lightly or gently.

lib-a-nus, s. [Lat.=frankincense.]

Bot. An old genus of Amyridacem, now called Boswellia. Libanus thurifera (Colebrooke) is now called Boswellia serrata.

li-bā -tion, s. [Fr., from Lat. libationem, accus. of libatio=a libation, from libatus, pa. par. of libo to sip, to pour out; Gr. leibō; Sp. libacion; Ital. libazione.]

1. Compar. Religions: A sacrifice, by an actual drink offering, by pouring liquids-usually oil or wine on the ground in honor of a divinity, or by the combination of both methods. In classic times bloody sacrifices were usually accompanied by libations, which always formed part of the religious ceremonies at the conclusion of a treaty of peace; hence the Greek spondai-a solemn treaty, from spendo to offer a libation. (Cf. Virg., Æn. v. 77; xii. 174). Sometimes libations were independent acts of worship (Il. xvi. 233); and they found a place in convivial gatherings and banquets (Virg., Æn. i. 734-38; Georg. ii. 101; Hor., Carm. IV. v. 31-34; Ovid, Fasti, ii. 637). Libations were usually of un mixed wine (enspondos=merum), but sometimes of milk, honey, and other fluids, either pure or diluted with water (Plin., H. N. xiv. 19). The word "libation "does not occur in the A. V., but clear traces of the practice may be found. 'Jacob set up a pillar of stone, and he poured a drink offering thereon and he poured oil thereon (Gen. xxxv. 14). "Strong wine was ordained "to be poured unto the Lord for a drink offering" (Numb. xxviii. 7); and Jeremiah (xix. 13) charges it against the people of Jerusalem and the kings of Judah "that they have poured out drink offerings unto other gods," and to "the queen of heaven" (xliv. 17, 19, 25).

37

[ocr errors]

"In this idea of a god eternally insatiable, joined to the hunger such restless nomads must often have suffered, is to be found the first cause of libation, of offering, of sacrifice."-R. Heath: Edgar Quinet, p. 284.

2. The wine or other liquor so poured out. "And large libations drenched the sands around." Pope: Homer's Iliad, ix. 230.

li-ba-tor-, a. [As if from a Lat. libatorius, from libatus, pa. par. of libo.] Of or pertaining to libations.

lib-bard, s. [Ger. liebard.] leopard.

[LEOPARD.] A

"The lion, and the libbard, and the bear." Cowper: Task, vi. 773. libbard's-bane, s. [LEOPARD'S-BANE.] 11b-bět, s. [Etym, doubtful; perhaps a variant of billet.] A billet of wood.

*11-běc-chi-ō, s. [Ital. libeccio.] The southwest

wind.

11-bel, *ly-bell, s. [Lat. libellus a little book or writing; dimin. of liber a book; Fr. libelle; Ital. & Port. libello; Sp. libelo.]

[blocks in formation]

2515

2. A defamatory writing, print, picture, or publication of any kind, containing any statements or representations maliciously made, and tending to bring any person into ridicule or contempt, or expose him to public hatred or obloquy; any obscene, blasphemous, or seditious publication whether in writing, print, signs, or pictures.

3. The act or crime of publishing a libel; as, to be charged with libel. II. Law:

United States Civil and Admiralty Law: A docu; ment of the plaintiff setting forth the charges and allegations made against the defendant; and specif. in case of a ship, a statement of the claims held against her by the plaintiff.

Eng. Eccles. & Scots Law: The summons, or similar writ, commencing a suit, and containing the plaintiff's allegations.

11-bel, v. t. & i. [LIBEL, 8.]

A. Transitive:

1. Ord. Lang.: To publish a libel upon; to hold up to public contempt, derision, or hatred by the publication of any libelous writing, print, picture, &c.; to lampoon.

"The despot of Lendenhall Street was libelled in prose and verse."-Macaulay: Hist. Eng., ch. xviii.

2. Law: To exhibit a charge against; as against a clergyman for unbecoming conduct, or against a ship for debt, &c.

B. Intrans.: To spread libels or defamatory publications or statements.

"What's this, but libelling against the senate, And blazoning our injustice everywhere?" Shakesp.: Titus Andronicus, iv. 4. li-běl-ant, 8. [Eng. libel; -ant.]

1. Ord. Lang.: One who libels; a libeler. 2. Law: One who exhibits a charge in an ecclesiastical or admiralty court.

*li-běl-ce', s. [Eng. libel, and suff. -ee.] Law: The suitor defendant against whom a libel has been filed. (Wharton.) li-běl-er, s. [Eng. libel; -er.] One who libels; one who publishes libels; a lampooner. 11-běl-Ist, s. [Eng. libel; -ist.] One who libels; a libeler.

11-běl-ous, a.. [Eng. libel; -ous.]. Of the nature of a libel; containing libels or anything tending to bring a person into public hatred, contempt, or derision; defamatory, scandalous. 11-běl-ous-ly, adv. [Eng. libelous; ly.] In a libelous or defamatory manner; with a libel. li-běl-la, s. [Lat. dimin. of libra=a balance.] 1. A small balance.

2. A level; an instrument for taking levels. li-běl -lu-la, s. [A name given by Linnæus; probably from Lat. libellulus a very little book, the leaves of which the expanded wings of the dragon-fly somewhat resemble (Littré, &c.).] Entom.: The typical genus of the family Libellulidæ (q. v.).

li-běl-la-l1-dæ, s. pl. [Modern Latin, &c., libellul(a); Lat. fem. pl. adj. suff. -ida.]

Entom.: Dragon-flies: a family of Neuropterous Insects, tribe Subulicornia. The larvae inhabit the water, and are of very predatory instincts. They somewhat resemble their parents, but are wingless. They breathe by branchise, either internal or external, and situated at the extremity of the abdomen. [DRAGON-FLY.]

11-ber, s. [From Lat. liber a book, because the fibrous layers of which liber is composed can at times be separated into laminae like the leaves of a book or an ancient manuscript roll.]

Bot. The innermost of the four layers constituting the bark of a plant. According to Gray, it consists of three kinds of cells, bast cells or fibers, large or more elongated cells, and cells of parenchyma. Called also Bast-layer and Endophlæum. liber-cells, liber-fibers, s. pl.

Bot.: Very long prosenchymatous cells occurring in liber. Liber fibers of various plants are of use for textile purposes. The shorter liber-cells pass into wood-cells, between which and liber-cells the difference is but slight.

lib -er-al, *11b'-er-all, a. & s. [French libéral, from Lat. liberalis, from liber-free; from the same root as libet or lubet it pleases; Sp. & Port. liberal; Ital. liberale.]

boil, boy; pout, jowl; cat, -cian,

[blocks in formation]

A. As adjective:

I. Ordinary Language:

1. Becoming or befitting one well-born; refined, gentlemanlike; free from meanness. 2. Such as a gentleman ought to be; accomplished, refined. "The people liberal, valiant, active, wealthy." Shakesp.: Henry VI., Pt. 11., iv. 7. go, gem; thin, this;

çhin, bench;

liberally

3. Free in disposition; generous, open-handed bountiful, munificent; ready to give or bestow; not mean, stingy, or niggardly.

"Men of this way should be most liberal." Shakesp.: Henry VIII., i. 3. It is frequently followed by of before that which is given or bestowed; sometimes by in. "Pure is the nymph, though liberal of her siniles." Cowper: Task, iii. 712. 4. Given freely, bountifully, or without stint; ample, generous.

"With too great a court and liberal largess." Shakesp.: Richard II., i. 4. 5. Abundant, profuse; as, a liberal flow of water. 6. Free, open, candid; as, a liberal interchange of thoughts.

7. Free from narrow, selfish, or contracted views or ideas; favorable to liberty and progress, civil, political, and religious; advocating reform and progress; having broad views; favoring freedom in the forms of administration of government; not conservative. [II.]

8. Not too strict, harsh, or severe; free; as, a liberal interpretation of a law.

*9. Licentious, loose, lax, dissolute; free to ex

cess.

II. Politics: A name given to that party in England which is in favor of reform and advancement. (Opposed to the Conservative party.) [B.]

B. As subst.: One who advocates progress and reform, especially in the direction of conferring greater power upon the people; an advocate of Liberalism. Spec., a member of the Liberal party of England.

The designation "Liberal," applied to a political party in England, is said to have been derived from the Liberal, a periodical set on foot by Lord Byron and his friends. Both political parties are named with tacit reference to an irresistible movement toward democracy which has long been in progress in Britain, as it was in the ancient Roman republic. The Conservatives, dreading the effect of this democratic current on the time-honored institutions of the country, make it their main object to conserve them. With this view they arrest forward movement when they can, and, when this is impracticable, attempt to retard the rate of progress. The Liberal party, on the contrary, little or nothing fearing the results of change, help the movement instead of attempting to stem or to lessen its progress. The Liberal party in English politics consists of two great sections or wings, generally in cooperation though sometimes in antagonism. These are the Whigs and the Radicals, the former seeking to remove the more obnoxious defects in the institutions of the country, with the view of insuring their stability; the latter, on the contrary, desiring to root some of them up instead of increasing their efficiency. For example, the Whigs are in favor of the Established Churches, the House of Lords, and the throne, while the more advanced of the Radicals would abolish all the three. The strength of the Whig party is in the middle classes, that of the Radicals among the artisans.

Obvious compounds: Liberal-hearted, liberalminded, liberal-souled, liberal-education, &c.

lib'-er-al-işm, s. [Eng. liberal; -ism.] The principles of a Liberal party; freedom from narrowness or bigotry; advocacy of the conferring of greater power in the state upon the people.

lib-er-al-ist, s. [Eng. liberal; -ist.] A Liberal (q. v.).

lib-er-al-ist -ic, a. [Eng. liberalist; -ic.] Pertaining to Liberalism; characterized by Liberalism; in accordance with Liberal principles.

lib-er-ǎl'-Ity, *lib-er-al-i-tie, s. [Fr. libéralité, from Lat. liberalitatem, accus. of liberalitas, from liberalis=liberal (q. v.).]

1. The quality or state of being liberal; disposition or readiness to give freely and largely; bounty, munificence, generosity, open-handedness.

2. Largeness or breadth of views; freedom from narrowness of mind or bigotry; catholicity, impartiality. 3. That which is given; a donation, a gratuity; an act of liberality or generosity.

lib-er-al-ize, v. t. [Eng. liberal; -ize.] To make or render liberal or catholic; to enlarge; to free from narrowness or bigotry.

lib-er-al-i-za'-tion, s. [English liberaliz(e); -ation.] The act or process of liberalizing, or making liberal and free.

lib'-er-al-ly, adv. [Eng. liberal; -ly.]

ness or meanness.

1. In a liberal, bountiful, or generous manner; munificently, generously, freely, open-handedly. 2. With liberality of views or ideas; without bigotry or narrowness; impartially; without selfish3. Freely; not strictly, harshly, or vigorously. sin, aş; expect, Xenophon, exist. ph = f. shus. -sious = bel, del. -ble, -dle, &c.

« ZurückWeiter »