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@@ -6948,25 +6948,25 @@ Of both your armies.</q> <rj><qau>Shak.</qau></rj><br/
<p><q>The latent rill, scare <qex>oozing</qex> through the grass.</q> <rj><qau>Thomson.</qau></rj><br/
[<source>1913 Webster</source>]</p>
<p><sn>2.</sn> <def>Fig.: To leak (out) or escape slowly; <as>as, the secret <ex>oozed</ex> out; his courage <ex>oozed</ex> out.</as></def><br/
[<source>1913 Webster</source>]</p>
<p><hw>Ooze</hw>, <pos>v. t.</pos> <def>To cause to ooze.</def> <rj><au>Alex. Smith.</au></rj><br/
[<source>1913 Webster</source>]</p>
<p><hw>Ooze leather</hw>. <def>Leather made from sheep and calf skins by mechanically forcing ooze through them; esp., such leather with a soft, finely granulated finish (called sometimes <col><b>velvet finish</b></col>) put on the flesh side for special purposes. Ordinary ooze leather is used for shoe uppers, in bookbinding, etc. Hence <col><b>Ooze calf</b></col>, <col><b>Ooze finish</b></col>, etc.</def><br/
[<source>Webster 1913 Suppl.</source>]</p>
-<p><hw>\'d8O`\'94*zo"a</hw> <pr>(?)</pr>, <pos>n. pl.</pos> <ety>[NL., fr. Gr. <grk>w,'o`n</grk> an egg + <grk>zo^,on</grk> an animal.]</ety> <fld>(Zo\'94l.)</fld> <def>Same as <er>Acrita</er>.</def><br/
+<p><hw>\'d8O`\'94*zo"a</hw> <pr>(?)</pr>, <pos>n. pl.</pos> <ety>[NL., fr. Gr. <grk>w,'o`n</grk> an egg + <grk>zw^,on</grk> an animal.]</ety> <fld>(Zo\'94l.)</fld> <def>Same as <er>Acrita</er>.</def><br/
[<source>1913 Webster</source>]</p>
<p><hw>oozing</hw> <pos>adj.</pos> <def>leaking out slowly.</def><br/
<syn><b>Syn. --</b> oozy, seeping.</syn><br/
[<source>WordNet 1.5</source> <source>+PJC</source>]</p>
<p><hw>Ooz"y</hw> <pr>(?)</pr>, <pos>a.</pos> <def>Miry; containing soft mud; resembling ooze; <as>as, the <ex>oozy</ex> bed of a river</as>.</def> <rj><au>Pope.</au></rj><br/
[<source>1913 Webster</source>]</p>
<p><hw>O*pa"cate</hw> <pr>(?)</pr>, <pos>v. t.</pos> <ety>[L. <ets>opacatus</ets>, p. p. of <ets>opacare</ets>.]</ety> <def>To darken; to cloud.</def> <mark>[Obs.]</mark> <rj><au>Boyle.</au></rj><br/
[<source>1913 Webster</source>]</p>
@@ -11870,25 +11870,25 @@ Our cloudy business, who gave us sign.</q> <rj><qau>Chapman.</qau></rj><br/
<p><hw>Os"te*o*tome</hw> <pr>(?)</pr>, <pos>n.</pos> <ety>[<ets>Osteo-</ets> + Gr. <grk>te`mnein</grk>.]</ety> <fld>(Surg.)</fld> <def>Strong nippers or a chisel for dividing bone.</def><br/
[<source>1913 Webster</source>]</p>
<p><hw>Os`te*ot"o*mist</hw> <pr>(?)</pr>, <pos>n.</pos> <def>One skilled in osteotomy.</def><br/
[<source>1913 Webster</source>]</p>
<p><hw>Os`te*ot"o*my</hw> <pr>(?)</pr>, <pos>n.</pos> <sn>1.</sn> <def>The dissection or anatomy of bones; osteology.</def><br/
[<source>1913 Webster</source>]</p>
<p><sn>2.</sn> <fld>(Surg.)</fld> <def>The operation of dividing a bone or of cutting a piece out of it, -- done to remedy deformity, etc.</def><br/
[<source>1913 Webster</source>]</p>
-<p><hw>\'d8Os`te*o*zo"a</hw> <pr>(?)</pr>, <pos>n. pl.</pos> <ety>[NL., fr. Gr. <grk>'oste`on</grk> a bone + <grk>zo^,on</grk> an animal.]</ety> <fld>(Zo\'94l.)</fld> <def>Same as <er>Vertebrata</er>.</def><br/
+<p><hw>\'d8Os`te*o*zo"a</hw> <pr>(?)</pr>, <pos>n. pl.</pos> <ety>[NL., fr. Gr. <grk>'oste`on</grk> a bone + <grk>zw^,on</grk> an animal.]</ety> <fld>(Zo\'94l.)</fld> <def>Same as <er>Vertebrata</er>.</def><br/
[<source>1913 Webster</source>]</p>
<p><hw>Os"ti*a*ry</hw> <pr>(?)</pr>, <pos>n.</pos>; <plu><it>pl.</it> <plw>-ries</plw> <pr>(#)</pr>.</plu> <ety>[L. <ets>ostium</ets> door, entrance. See <er>Usher</er>.]</ety> <sn>1.</sn> <def>The mouth of a river; an estuary.</def> <mark>[R.]</mark> <rj><au>Sir T. Browne.</au></rj><br/
[<source>1913 Webster</source>]</p>
<p><sn>2.</sn> <def>One who keeps the door, especially the door of a church; a porter.</def> <rj><au>N. Bacon.</au></rj><br/
[<source>1913 Webster</source>]</p>
<p><hw>Os"tic</hw> <pr>(?)</pr>, <pos>a.</pos> <ety>[From North American Indian <ets>oshtegwon</ets> a head.]</ety> <def>Pertaining to, or applied to, the language of the Tuscaroras, Iroquois, Wyandots, Winnebagoes, and a part of the Sioux Indians.</def> <rj><au>Schoolcraft.</au></rj><br/
[<source>1913 Webster</source>]</p>
<p><hw>Os"ti*ole</hw> <pr>(?)</pr>, <pos>n.</pos> <ety>[L. <ets>ostiolum</ets> a little door, dim. of <ets>ostium</ets> a door: cf. F. <ets>ostiole</ets>.]</ety> <fld>(Bot.)</fld> <sd>(a)</sd> <def>The exterior opening of a stomate. See <er>Stomate</er>.</def> <sd>(b)</sd> <def>Any small orifice.</def><br/
@@ -12240,25 +12240,25 @@ But Heaven thought <qex>otherwise</qex>.</q> <rj><qau>Addison.</qau></rj><br/
<p><hw>O"to*scope</hw> <pr>(?)</pr>, <pos>n.</pos> <ety>[<ets>Oto-</ets> + <ets>-scope</ets>.]</ety> <def>An instrument for examining the condition of the ear.</def><br/
[<source>1913 Webster</source>]</p>
<p><hw>O`to*scope"ic</hw> <pr>(?)</pr>, <pos>a.</pos> <def>Of or pertaining to the otoscope or to otoscopy.</def><br/
[<source>1913 Webster</source>]</p>
<p><hw>O*tos"co*py</hw> <pr>(?)</pr>, <pos>n.</pos> <fld>(Med.)</fld> <def>The examination of the ear; the art of using the otoscope.</def><br/
[<source>1913 Webster</source>]</p>
<p><hw>O*tos"te*al</hw> <pr>(?)</pr>, <pos>n.</pos> <ety>[<ets>Oto-</ets> + Gr. <grk>'oste`on</grk> a bone.]</ety> <fld>(Anat.)</fld> <def>An auditory ossicle.</def> <rj><au>R. Owen.</au></rj><br/
[<source>1913 Webster</source>]</p>
-<p><hw>\'d8O`to*zo"um</hw> <pr>(?)</pr>, <pos>prop. n.</pos> <ety>[NL., fr. Gr. <?/, a fabled giant + <grk>zo^,on</grk> an animal.]</ety> <fld>(Paleon.)</fld> <def>An extinct genus of huge vertebrates, probably dinosaurs, known only from four-toed tracks in Triassic sandstones.</def><br/
+<p><hw>\'d8O`to*zo"um</hw> <pr>(?)</pr>, <pos>prop. n.</pos> <ety>[NL., fr. Gr. <?/, a fabled giant + <grk>zw^,on</grk> an animal.]</ety> <fld>(Paleon.)</fld> <def>An extinct genus of huge vertebrates, probably dinosaurs, known only from four-toed tracks in Triassic sandstones.</def><br/
[<source>1913 Webster</source>]</p>
<p><hw>Ot"tar</hw> <pr>(?)</pr>, <pos>n.</pos> <def>See <er>Attar</er>.</def><br/
[<source>1913 Webster</source>]</p>
<p><hw>\'d8Ot*ta"va ri"ma</hw> <pr>(?)</pr>. <ety>[It. See <er>Octave</er>, and <er>Rhyme</er>.]</ety> <fld>(Pros.)</fld> <def>A stanza of eight lines of heroic verse, with three rhymes, the first six lines rhyming alternately and the last two forming a couplet. It was used by Byron in \'bdDon Juan,\'b8 by Keats in \'bdIsabella,\'b8 by Shelley in \'bdThe Witch of Atlas,\'b8 etc.</def><br/
[<source>Webster 1913 Suppl.</source>]</p>
<p><hw>Ot"ta*was</hw> <pr>(?)</pr>, <pos>n. pl.</pos>; <sing>sing. <singw>Ottawa</singw> <pr>(<?/)</pr></sing>. <fld>(Ethnol.)</fld> <def>A tribe of Indians who, when first known, lived on the Ottawa River. Most of them subsequently migrated to the southwestern shore of Lake Superior.</def><br/
[<source>1913 Webster</source>]</p>
<p><hw>Ot"ter</hw> <pr>(<ocr/t"t<etil/r)</pr>, <pos>n.</pos> <ety>[OE. <ets>oter</ets>, AS. <ets>otor</ets>; akin to D. & G. <ets>otter</ets>, Icel. <ets>otr</ets>, Dan. <ets>odder</ets>, Sw. <ets>utter</ets>, Lith. <ets>udra</ets>, Russ, <ets>vuidra</ets>, Gr. <grk>"y`dra</grk> water serpent, hydra, Skr. <ets>udra</ets> otter, and also to E. <ets>water</ets>. <root/137, 215. See <er>Water</er>, and cf. <er>Hydra</er>.]</ety><br/

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