Z (zē; in England commonly, and in America
sometimes, z&ebreve;d; formerly, also,
&ibreve;z"z&ebreve;rd) Z, the twenty-sixth and last letter of the
English alphabet, is a vocal consonant. It is taken from the Latin
letter Z, which came from the Greek alphabet, this having it from a
Semitic source. The ultimate origin is probably Egyptian.
Etymologically, it is most closely related to s, y, and
j; as in glass, glaze; E. yoke, Gr. &?;,
L. yugum; E. zealous, jealous. See Guide to
Pronunciation, §§ 273, 274.
Za (?), n.(Min.)An old
solfeggio name for B flat; the seventh harmonic, as heard in the or
æolian string; -- so called by Tartini. It was long considered a
false, but is the true note of the chord of the flat seventh.H. W. Poole.
{ Za"ba*ism (?), Za"bism (?) },
n.See Sabianism.
Za"bi*an (?), a. & n.See
Sabian.
Zac"co (?), n.(Arch.)See
Zocco.
||Za*chun" (?), n.(Bot.)An
oil pressed by the Arabs from the fruit of a small thorny tree
(Balanites Ægyptiaca), and sold to piligrims for a
healing ointment.J. Smith (Dict. Econ. Plants).
||Zaer"the (?), n.(Zoöl.)Same as Zärthe.
Zaf"fer (?), n. [F. zafre,
safre; cf. Sp. zafra, safra, It. saffera,
G. zaffer; all probably of Arabic origin. Cf. Zaphara.]
A pigment obtained, usually by roasting cobalt glance with sand
or quartz, as a dark earthy powder. It consists of crude cobalt oxide,
or of an impure cobalt arseniate. It is used in porcelain painting,
and in enameling pottery, to produce a blue color, and is often
confounded with smalt, from which, however, it is distinct, as it
contains no potash. The name is often loosely applied to mixtures of
zaffer proper with silica, or oxides of iron, manganese, etc.
[Written also zaffre, and formerly zaffree,
zaffar, zaffir.]
||Zaim (?; 277), n. [Turk. & Ar.
za'īm.] A Turkish chief who supports a mounted
militia bearing the same name.Smart.
||Zaim"et (?; 277), n. [Turk. & Ar.
za'īmet.] A district from which a Zaim draws his
revenue.Smart.
Zain (?), n.A horse of a dark
color, neither gray nor white, and having no spots.Smart.
Za*lamb"do*dont (?), a.(Zoöl.)Of or pertaining to a tribe
(Zalambdodonta) of Insectivora in which the molar teeth have
but one V-shaped ridge.
Za*lamb"do*dont, n.One of the
Zalambdodonta. The tenrec, solenodon, and golden moles are
examples.
||Za*mang" (?), n.(Bot.)An
immense leguminous tree (Pithecolobium Saman) of Venezuela. Its
branches form a hemispherical mass, often one hundred and eighty feet
across. The sweet pulpy pods are used commonly for feeding cattle.
Also called rain tree.J. Smith (Dict. Econ.
Plants).
Zam"bo (?), n.; pl.Zambos (#). [See Sambo.] The child of a
mulatto and a negro; also, the child of an Indian and a negro;
colloquially or humorously, a negro; a sambo.
||Za"mi*a (?), n. [L. zamia a
kind of fir cone, from Gr. &?;, &?;, hurt, damage. See Plin. xvi.
44.] (Bot.)A genus of cycadaceous plants, having the
appearance of low palms, but with exogenous wood. See Coontie,
and Illust. of Strobile.
Zam`in*dar" (?), n. [Hind.
zemīndār, zamīndār, a
landholder, Per. zamīndār; zamīn land
dār holding.] A landowner; also, a collector of land
revenue; now, usually, a kind of feudatory recognized as an actual
proprietor so long as he pays to the government a certain fixed
revenue. [Written also zemindar.] [India]
{ Zam"in*da*ry (?), Zam"in*da*ri (?) },
n.The jurisdiction of a zamindar; the land
possessed by a zamindar. [Written also zemindary,
zemindari.]
Za"mite (?), n.(Paleon.)A
fossil cycad of the genus Zamia.
Za*mouse" (?), n. [From a native name.]
(Zoöl.)A West African buffalo (Bubalus
brachyceros) having short horns depressed at the base, and large
ears fringed internally with three rows of long hairs. It is destitute
of a dewlap. Called also short-horned buffalo, and bush
cow.
||Zam*po"gna (?), n. [It.] (Mus.)A sort of bagpipe formerly in use among Italian peasants. It is
now almost obsolete. [Written also zampugna.]
Zan"der (?), n. [Cf. D. zand
sand.] (Zoöl.)A European pike perch (Stizostedion
lucioperca) allied to the wall-eye; -- called also sandari,
sander, sannat, schill, and
zant.
Zand"mole` (?), n. [Cf. D. zand
sand. See Sand, and Mole the animal.]
(Zoöl.)The sand mole.
Zan"te (?), n.(Bot.)See
Zantewood.
Zan"te cur"rant (?). A kind of seedless grape or
raisin; -- so called from Zante, one of the Ionian
Islands.
Zan"te*wood` (?), n.(Bot.)(a)A yellow dyewood; fustet; -- called also
zante, and zante fustic. See Fustet, and the
Note under Fustic.(b)Satinwood
(Chloroxylon Swietenia).
Zan"ti*ot (?), n.A native or
inhabitant of Zante, one of the Ionian Islands.
Za"ny (?), n.; pl.Zanies (#). [It. zanni a buffoon, merry-
andrew, orig. same as Giovanni John, i. e., merry John,
L. Ioannes, Gr. &?;, Heb. Yōkhānān,
prop., the Lord graciously gave: cf. F. zani, fr. the Italian.
Cf. Jenneting.] A merry-andrew; a buffoon.
Then write that I may follow, and so be
Thy echo, thy debtor, thy foil, thy zany.
Donne.
Preacher at once, and zany of thy
age.
Pope.
Za"ny (?), v. t.To mimic.
[Obs.]
Your part is acted; give me leave at distance
To zany it.
Massinger.
Za"ny*ism (?), n.State or
character of a zany; buffoonery.Coleridge.H.
Morley.
Zaph"a*ra (?), n.Zaffer.
||Za*phren"tis (?), n. [NL.]
(Paleon.)An extinct genus of cyathophylloid corals common
in the Paleozoic formations. It is cup-shaped with numerous septa, and
with a deep pit in one side of the cup.
Zap`o*til"la (?), n.(Bot.)See Sapodilla.
Zap"ti*ah (?), n.A Turkish
policeman. [Written also zaptieh.]
{ Zar`a*thus"tri*an (?), Zar`a*thus"tric (?) },
a.Of or pertaining to Zarathustra, or
Zoroaster; Zoroastrian.Tylor.
Zar`a*thus"trism (?), n.See
Zoroastrianism.
Zar"a*tite (?), n.(Min.) [Named
after Gen. Zarata of Spain.] A hydrous carbonate of nickel
occurring as an emerald-green incrustation on chromite; -- called also
emerald nickel.
||Za*re"ba (?), n.(Mil.)An
improvised stockade; especially, one made of thorn bushes, etc.
[Written also zareeba, and zeriba.] [Egypt]
"Ah," he moralizes, "what wonderful instinct on the
part of this little creature to surround itself with a zareba
like the troops after Osman Digma."
R.
Jefferies.
Zar"nich (?), n. [F., fr. Ar. az-
zernīkh, fr. Gr. &?;. See Arsenic.] (Min.)Native sulphide of arsenic, including sandarach, or realgar, and
orpiment.
||Zär"the (?), n.(Zoöl.)A European bream (Abramis
vimba). [Written also zaerthe.]
||Za"ti (?), n.(Zoöl.)A species of macaque (Macacus pileatus) native of India
and Ceylon. It has a crown of long erect hair, and tuft of radiating
hairs on the back of the head. Called also capped
macaque.
||Zau*schne"ri*a (?), n. [NL., named for
M. Zauschner, a Bohemian botanist.] (Bot.)A genus
of flowering plants. Zauschneria Californica is a
suffrutescent perennial, with showy red flowers much resembling those
of the garden fuchsia.
Zax (zăks), n.A tool for
trimming and puncturing roofing slates. [Written also
sax.]
||Za"yat (?; 277), n.A public
shed, or portico, for travelers, worshipers, etc. [Burmah]
||Ze"a (zē"&adot;), n. [L., a kind
of grain, fr. Gr. ze`a, zeia`; cf. Skr.
yava barley.] (Bot.)A genus of large grasses of
which the Indian corn (Zea Mays) is the only species known. Its
origin is not yet ascertained. See Maize.
Zeal (zēl), n. [F.
zèle; cf. Pg. & It. zelo, Sp. zelo,
celo; from L. zelus, Gr. &?;, probably akin to &?; to
boil. Cf. Yeast, Jealous.]
1.Passionate ardor in the pursuit of
anything; eagerness in favor of a person or cause; ardent and active
interest; engagedness; enthusiasm; fervor. "Ambition varnished
o'er with zeal." Milton. "Zeal, the blind
conductor of the will." Dryden. "Zeal's never-dying
fire." Keble.
I bear them record that they have a zeal of God,
but not according to knowledge.
Rom. x. 2.
A zeal for liberty is sometimes an eagerness to
subvert with little care what shall be established.
Johnson.
2.A zealot. [Obs.] B.
Jonson.
Zeal, v. i.To be zealous.
[Obs. & R.] Bacon.
Zeal"ant (?), n.One who is
zealous; a zealot; an enthusiast. [Obs.]
To certain zealants, all speech of pacification
is odious.
Bacon.
Zealed (?), a.Full of zeal;
characterized by zeal. [Obs.] "Zealed religion."
Beau. & Fl.
Zeal"ful (?), a.Full of
zeal. [R.] Sylvester.
Zeal"less (?), a.Wanting
zeal.Hammond.
Zeal"ot (?), n. [F.
zélote, L. zelotes, Gr. &?;. See Zeal.]
One who is zealous; one who engages warmly in any cause, and
pursues his object with earnestness and ardor; especially, one who is
overzealous, or carried away by his zeal; one absorbed in devotion to
anything; an enthusiast; a fanatical partisan.
Zealots for the one [tradition] were in hostile
array against zealots for the other.
Sir J.
Stephen.
In Ayrshire, Clydesdale, Nithisdale, Annandale, every
parish was visited by these turbulent zealots.
Macaulay.
Zea*lot"ic*al (?), a.Like, or
suitable to, a zealot; ardently zealous. [R.]
Strype.
Zeal"ot*ism (?), n.The character
or conduct of a zealot; zealotry.
Zeal"ot*ist, n.A zealot.
[Obs.] Howell.
Zeal"ot*ry (?), n.The character
and behavior of a zealot; excess of zeal; fanatical devotion to a
cause.
Enthusiasm, visionariness, seems the tendency of the
German; zeal, zealotry, of the English; fanaticism, of the
French.
Coleridge.
Zeal"ous (?; 277), a. [LL.
zelosus. See Zeal.]
1.Filled with, or characterized by, zeal;
warmly engaged, or ardent, in behalf of an object.
He may be zealous in the salvation of
souls.
Law.
2.Filled with religious zeal. [Obs.]
Shak.
-- Zeal"ous*ly, adv. --
Zeal"ous*ness, n.
Ze"bec (?), n.(Naut.)See
Xebec.
Ze"bra (?), n. [Pg. zebra; cf.
Sp. cebra; probably from a native African name.]
(Zoöl.)Either one of two species of South African
wild horses remarkable for having the body white or yellowish white,
and conspicuously marked with dark brown or brackish bands.
&fist; The true or mountain zebra (Equus, or Asinus, zebra)
is nearly white, and the bands which cover the body and legs are
glossy black. Its tail has a tuft of black hair at the tip. It
inhabits the mountains of Central and Southern Africa, and is noted
for its wariness and wildness, as well as for its swiftness. The
second species (Equus, or Asinus, Burchellii), known as
Burchell's zebra, and dauw, inhabits the grassy plains
of South Africa, and differs from the preceding in not having dark
bands on the legs, while those on the body are more irregular. It has
a long tail, covered with long white flowing hair.
Zebra caterpillar, the larva of an American
noctuid moth (Mamestra picta). It is light yellow, with a broad
black stripe on the back and one on each side; the lateral stripes are
crossed with withe lines. It feeds on cabbages, beets, clover, and
other cultivated plants. -- Zebra opossum,
the zebra wolf. See under Wolf. -- Zebra
parrakeet, an Australian grass parrakeet, often kept as
a cage bird. Its upper parts are mostly pale greenish yellow,
transversely barred with brownish black crescents; the under parts,
rump, and upper tail coverts, are bright green; two central tail
feathers and the cheek patches are blue. Called also canary
parrot, scallop parrot, shell parrot, and
undulated parrot. -- Zebra poison(Bot.), a poisonous tree (Euphorbia arborea) of the
Spurge family, found in South Africa. Its milky juice is so poisonous
that zebras have been killed by drinking water in which its branches
had been placed, and it is also used as an arrow poison.J.
Smith (Dict. Econ. Plants). -- Zebra shark.
Same as Tiger shark, under Tiger. --
Zebra spider, a hunting spider. --
Zebra swallowtail, a very large North American
swallow-tailed butterfly (Iphiclides ajax), in which the wings
are yellow, barred with black; -- called also ajax. --
Zebra wolf. See under Wolf.
Ze"bra*wood` (?), n.(a)A kind of cabinet wood having beautiful black, brown, and whitish
stripes, the timber of a tropical American tree (Connarus
Guianensis).(b)The wood of a small
West Indian myrtaceous tree (Eugenia fragrans).(c)The wood of an East Indian tree of the genus
Guettarda.
Ze"brine (?), a.(Zoöl.)Pertaining to, or resembling, the zebra.
Ze"bu (?), n. [&?;. zébu;
of uncertain origin.] (Zoöl.)A bovine mammal (Ros
Indicus) extensively domesticated in India, China, the East
Indies, and East Africa. It usually has short horns, large pendulous
ears, slender legs, a large dewlap, and a large, prominent hump over
the shoulders; but these characters vary in different domestic breeds,
which range in size from that of the common ox to that of a large
mastiff.
&fist; Some of the varieties are used as beasts of burden, and some
fore for riding, while others are raised for their milk and flesh. The
Brahmin bull, regarded as sacred by the Hindoos, also belongs to this
species. The male is called also Indian bull, Indian ox,
Madras ox, and sacred bull.
Ze"bub (?), n.(Zoöl.)A large noxious fly of Abyssinia, which like the tsetse fly, is
destructive to cattle.
Ze"chin (?; 277), n.See
Sequin.
||Zech"stein` (?), n. [Gr., fr.
zeche a mine + stein a stone.] (Geol.)The
upper division of the Permian (Dyas) of Europe. The prevailing rock is
a magnesian limestone.
Zed (?), n. [F., probably through It.
zeta, fr. L. zeta. See Zeta.] The letter
Z; -- called also zee, and formerly izzard.
"Zed, thou unnecessary letter!" Shak.
Zed"o*a*ry (?), n. [F.
zédoaire, LL. zedoaria; cf. It. zedoaria,
zettovario, Pg. zedoaria, Sp. zedoaria,
cedoaria; all fr. Ar. & Per. zedw&?;r.] (Med.)A medicinal substance obtained in the East Indies, having a
fragrant smell, and a warm, bitter, aromatic taste. It is used in
medicine as a stimulant.
&fist; It is the rhizome of different species of Curcuma,
esp. C. zedoaria, and comes in short, firm pieces, externally
of a wrinkled gray, ash-colored appearance, but within of a brownish
red color. There are two kinds, round zedoary, and long zedoary.
||Zee"koe (?), n. [D., sea cow, lake
cow.] (Zoöl.)A hippopotamus.
||Zeh"ner (?), n. [G.] An Austrian
silver coin equal to ten kreutzers, or about five cents.
Ze"in (?), n. [Cf. F.
zéïne. See Zea.] (Chem.)A
nitrogenous substance of the nature of gluten, obtained from the seeds
of Indian corn (Zea) as a soft, yellowish, amorphous
substance. [Formerly written zeine.]
Zem`in*dar" (?), n.Same as
Zamindar.
{ Zem"in*da*ry (?), ||Zem"in*da*ri (?) },
n.Same as Zamindary.
Zem"ni (?), n.(Zoöl.)The blind mole rat (Spalax typhlus), native of Eastern
Europe and Asia. Its eyes and ears are rudimentary, and its fur is
soft and brownish, more or less tinged with gray. It constructs
extensive burrows.
||Ze*na"na (?), n. [Hind.
zenāna, zanāna, fr. Per.
zanāna, fr. zan woman; akin to E. queen.]
The part of a dwelling appropriated to women. [India]
Zend (?), n. [See Zend-Avesta.]
Properly, the translation and exposition in the Huzvâresh,
or literary Pehlevi, language, of the Avesta, the Zoroastrian sacred
writings; as commonly used, the language (an ancient Persian dialect)
in which the Avesta is written.
||Zend`-A*ves"ta (?), n. [Properly, the
Avesta, or sacred text, and its zend, or interpretation,
in a more modern and intelligible language. W. D. Whitney.]
The sacred writings of the ancient Persian religion, attributed
to Zoroaster, but chiefly of a later date.
||Zen"dik (?), n. [Ar.
zandīk.] An atheist or unbeliever; -- name given in
the East to those charged with disbelief of any revealed religion, or
accused of magical heresies.
Ze"nick (?), n.(Zoöl.)A South African burrowing mammal (Suricata tetradactyla),
allied to the civets. It is grayish brown, with yellowish transverse
stripes on the back. Called also suricat.
Ze"nik (?), n.(Zoöl.)See Zenick.
Ze"nith (?; 277), n. [OE. senyth,
OF. cenith, F. zénith, Sp. zenit,
cenit, abbrev. fr. Ar. samt-urras way of the head,
vertical place; samt way, path + al the + ras
head. Cf. Azimuth.]
1.That point in the visible celestial
hemisphere which is vertical to the spectator; the point of the
heavens directly overhead; -- opposed to nadir.
From morn
To noon he fell, from noon to dewy eve,
A summer's day; and with the setting sun
Dropped from the zenith, like a falling star.
Milton.
2.hence, figuratively, the point of
culmination; the greatest height; the height of success or
prosperity.
I find my zenith doth depend upon
A most auspicious star.
Shak.
This dead of midnight is the noon of thought,
And wisdom mounts her zenith with the stars.
Mrs. Barbauld.
It was during those civil troubles . . . this aspiring
family reached the zenith.
Macaulay.
Zenith distance. (Astron.)See under
Distance. -- Zenith sector.
(Astron.)See Sector, 3. -- Zenith
telescope(Geodesy), a telescope specially
designed for determining the latitude by means of any two stars which
pass the meridian about the same time, and at nearly equal distances
from the zenith, but on opposite sides of it. It turns both on a
vertical and a horizontal axis, is provided with a graduated vertical
semicircle, and a level for setting it to a given zenith distance, and
with a micrometer for measuring the difference of the zenith distances
of the two stars.
Ze"nith*al (?), a.Of or pertaining
to the zenith. "The deep zenithal blue."
Tyndall.
Ze"o*lite (?), n. [Gr. &?; to boil +
-lite: cf. F. zéolithe.] (Min.)A
term now used to designate any one of a family of minerals, hydrous
silicates of alumina, with lime, soda, potash, or rarely baryta. Here
are included natrolite, stilbite, analcime, chabazite, thomsonite,
heulandite, and others. These species occur of secondary origin in the
cavities of amygdaloid, basalt, and lava, also, less frequently, in
granite and gneiss. So called because many of these species intumesce
before the blowpipe.
Needle zeolite, needlestone;
natrolite.
Ze`o*lit"ic (?), a.Of or
pertaining to a zeolite; consisting of, or resembling, a
zeolite.
Ze`o*lit"i*form (?), a.Having the
form of a zeolite.
Zeph"yr (?), n. [L. zephyrus, Gr.
&?;, akin to &?; darkness, the dark side, west: cf. F.
zéphyr.] The west wind; poetically, any soft,
gentle breeze. "Soft the zephyr blows."
Gray.
As gentle
As zephyrs blowing below the violet.
Shak.
Zephyr cloth, a thin kind of cassimere made
in Belgium; also, a waterproof fabric of wool. -- Zephyr
shawl, a kind of thin, light, embroidered shawl made of
worsted and cotton. -- Zephyr yarn, or
worsted, a fine, soft kind of yarn or worsted, -
- used for knitting and embroidery.
||Zeph"y*rus (?), n. [L. See
Zephyr.] The west wind, or zephyr; -- usually personified,
and made the most mild and gentle of all the sylvan deities.
Mild as when Zephyrus on Flora
breathes.
Milton.
Ze"quin (?), n.See
Sequin.
||Zer"da (?), n. [Of African origin.]
(Zoöl.)The fennec.
||Ze*ri"ba (?), n.(Mil.)Same as Zareba.
Ze"ro (?), n.; pl.Zeros (#) or Zeroes. [F.
zéro, from Ar. çafrun,
çifrun, empty, a cipher. Cf. Cipher.]
1.(Arith.)A cipher; nothing;
naught.
2.The point from which the graduation of a
scale, as of a thermometer, commences.
&fist; Zero in the Centigrade, or Celsius thermometer, and
in the Réaumur thermometer, is at the point at which water
congeals. The zero of the Fahrenheit thermometer is fixed at the point
at which the mercury stands when immersed in a mixture of snow and
common salt. In Wedgwood's pyrometer, the zero corresponds with
1077° on the Fahrenheit scale. See Illust. of
Thermometer.
3.Fig.: The lowest point; the point of
exhaustion; as, his patience had nearly reached zero.
Absolute zero. See under
Absolute. -- Zero method(Physics), a method of comparing, or measuring, forces,
electric currents, etc., by so opposing them that the pointer of an
indicating apparatus, or the needle of a galvanometer, remains at, or
is brought to, zero, as contrasted with methods in which the
deflection is observed directly; -- called also null
method. -- Zero point, the point
indicating zero, or the commencement of a scale or reckoning.
Zest (?), n. [F. zeste, probably
fr. L. schistos split, cleft, divided, Gr. &?;, from &?; to
split, cleave. Cf. Schism.]
1.A piece of orange or lemon peel, or the
aromatic oil which may be squeezed from such peel, used to give flavor
to liquor, etc.
2.Hence, something that gives or enhances a
pleasant taste, or the taste itself; an appetizer; also, keen
enjoyment; relish; gusto.
Almighty Vanity! to thee they owe
Their zest of pleasure, and their balm of woe.
Young.
Liberality of disposition and conduct gives the highest
zest and relish to social intercourse.
Gogan.
3.The woody, thick skin inclosing the kernel
of a walnut. [Obs.]
Zest, v. t. [imp. & p.
p.Zested; p. pr. & vb. n.Zesting.]
1.To cut into thin slips, as the peel of an
orange, lemon, etc.; to squeeze, as peel, over the surface of
anything.
2.To give a relish or flavor to; to heighten
the taste or relish of; as, to zest wine.Gibber.
||Ze"ta (?), n. [L., from Gr. &?;. Cf.
Zed.] A Greek letter [ζ] corresponding to our
z.
Ze*tet"ic (?), a. [Gr. &?;, fr. &?; to
seek: cf. F. zététique.] Seeking; proceeding
by inquiry.
Zetetic method(Math.), the method
used for finding the value of unknown quantities by direct search, in
investigation, or in the solution of problems. [R.]
Hutton.
Ze*tet"ic, n.A seeker; -- a name
adopted by some of the Pyrrhonists.
Ze*tet"ics (?), n. [See Zetetic,
a.] (Math.)A branch of algebra which
relates to the direct search for unknown quantities. [R.]
Zeu"glo*don (?), n. [Gr. &?; the strap
or loop of a yoke + &?;, &?;, tooth.] (Paleon.)A genus of
extinct Eocene whales, remains of which have been found in the Gulf
States. The species had very long and slender bodies and broad
serrated teeth. See Phocodontia.
Zeu"glo*dont (?), (Zoöl.)Any species of
Zeuglodonta.
||Zeu`glo*don"ta (?), n. pl. [NL.]
(Zoöl.)Same as Phocodontia.
Zeug"ma (?), n. [L., from Gr. &?;, fr.
&?; to yoke, join. See Yoke.] (Gram.)A figure by
which an adjective or verb, which agrees with a nearer word, is, by
way of supplement, referred also to another more remote; as, "hic
illius arma, hic currus fuit;" where fuit, which
agrees directly with currus, is referred also to
arma.
Zeug*mat"ic (?), a.Of or
pertaining to zeugma; characterized by zeugma.
||Zeu`go*bran`chi*a"ta (?), n. pl. [NL.,
fr. Gr. &?; to yoke + &?; a gill.] (Zoöl.)Same as
Zygobranchia.
Zeus (?), n.(Gr. Myth.)The
chief deity of the Greeks, and ruler of the upper world (cf.
Hades). He was identified with Jupiter.
Zeu*ze"ri*an (?), n.(Zoöl.)Any one of a group of bombycid moths of which the genus
Zeuzera is the type. Some of these moths are of large size. The
goat moth is an example.
Zey"lan*ite (?), n.(Min.)See Ceylanite.
{ Zib"et, Zib"eth } (?), n.
[Cf. It. zibetto. See Civet.] (Zoöl.)A carnivorous mammal (Viverra zibetha) closely allied to
the civet, from which it differs in having the spots on the body less
distinct, the throat whiter, and the black rings on the tail more
numerous.
&fist; It inhabits India, Southern China, and the East Indies. It
yields a perfume similar to that of the civet. It is often
domesticated by the natives, and then serves the same purposes as the
domestic cat. Called also Asiatic, or Indian, civet.
Zie"ga (?), n.Curd produced from
milk by adding acetic acid, after rennet has ceased to cause
coagulation.Brande & C.
Zie`tri*si"kite (?), n.(Min.)A mineral wax, vert similar to ozocerite. It is found at
Zietrisika, Moldavia, whence its name.
||Zif (?), n. [Heb. ziv.]
The second month of the Jewish ecclesiastical year, corresponding
to our May.
{ Zig"ger, Zig"hyr } (?), v.
i.(Mining)Same as Sicker. [Prov.
Eng.] Raymond.
Zig"zag` (?), n. [F. zigzag, G.
zickzack, from zacke, zacken, a dentil, tooth.
Cf. Tack a small nail.]
1.Something that has short turns or
angles.
The fanatics going straight forward and openly, the
politicians by the surer mode of zigzag.
Burke.
2.(Arch.)A molding running in a
zigzag line; a chevron, or series of chevrons. See Illust. of
Chevron, 3.
3.(Fort.)See Boyau.
Zig"zag` (?), a.Having short,
sharp turns; running this way and that in an onward course.
Zig"zag`, v. t. [imp. & p.
p.Zigzagged (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Zigzagging.] To form with short turns.
Zig"zag`, v. i.To move in a zigzag
manner; also, to have a zigzag shape.R. Browning.
Zig"zag`ger*y (?), n.The quality
or state of being zigzag; crookedness. [R.]
The . . . zigzaggery of my father's
approaches.
Sterne.
Zig"zag`gy, a.Having sharp
turns.Barham.
Zil"la (?), n.(Bot.)A low,
thorny, suffrutescent, crucifeous plant (Zilla myagroides)
found in the deserts of Egypt. Its leaves are boiled in water, and
eaten, by the Arabs.
||Zil"lah (?), n. [Ar. zila.]
A district or local division, as of a province.
[India]
||Zimb (?), n.(Zoöl.)A large, venomous, two-winged fly, native of Abyssinia. It is
allied to the tsetse fly, and, like the latter, is destructive to
cattle.
Zim"ent-wa`ter (?), n. [G. cement-
wasser. See Cement.] A kind of water found in copper
mines; water impregnated with copper.
Zinc (z&ibreve;&nsm;k), n. [G.
zink, probably akin to zinn tin: cf. F. zinc,
from the German. Cf. Tin.] (Chem.)An abundant
element of the magnesium-cadmium group, extracted principally from the
minerals zinc blende, smithsonite, calamine, and franklinite, as an
easily fusible bluish white metal, which is malleable, especially when
heated. It is not easily oxidized in moist air, and hence is used for
sheeting, coating galvanized iron, etc. It is used in making brass,
britannia, and other alloys, and is also largely consumed in electric
batteries. Symbol Zn. Atomic weight 64.9. [Formerly written also
zink.]
Butter of zinc(Old Chem.), zinc
chloride, ZnCl2, a deliquescent white waxy or oily
substance. -- Oxide of zinc. (Chem.)See Zinc oxide, below. -- Zinc amine(Chem.), a white amorphous substance,
Zn(NH2)2, obtained by the action of ammonia on
zinc ethyl; -- called also zinc amide. -- Zinc
amyle(Chem.), a colorless, transparent liquid,
composed of zinc and amyle, which, when exposed to the atmosphere,
emits fumes, and absorbs oxygen with rapidity. -- Zinc
blende [cf. G. zinkblende] (Min.), a
native zinc sulphide. See Blende, n.(a). -- Zinc bloom [cf. G.
zinkblumen flowers of zinc, oxide of zinc] (Min.),
hydrous carbonate of zinc, usually occurring in white earthy
incrustations; -- called also hydrozincite. --
Zinc ethyl(Chem.), a colorless,
transparent, poisonous liquid, composed of zinc and ethyl, which takes
fire spontaneously on exposure to the atmosphere. -- Zinc
green, a green pigment consisting of zinc and cobalt
oxides; -- called also Rinmann's green. -- Zinc
methyl(Chem.), a colorless mobile liquid
Zn(CH3)2, produced by the action of methyl
iodide on a zinc sodium alloy. It has a disagreeable odor, and is
spontaneously inflammable in the air. It has been of great importance
in the synthesis of organic compounds, and is the type of a large
series of similar compounds, as zinc ethyl, zinc amyle,
etc. -- Zinc oxide(Chem.), the
oxide of zinc, ZnO, forming a light fluffy sublimate when zinc is
burned; -- called also flowers of zinc, philosopher's
wool, nihil album, etc. The impure oxide produced by
burning the metal, roasting its ores, or in melting brass, is called
also pompholyx, and tutty. -- Zinc
spinel(Min.), a mineral, related to spinel,
consisting essentially of the oxides of zinc and aluminium;
gahnite. -- Zinc vitriol(Chem.),
zinc sulphate. See White vitriol, under
Vitriol. -- Zinc white, a white
powder consisting of zinc oxide, used as a pigment.
Zinc, v. t. [imp. & p.
p.Zincked or Zinced (&?;); p. pr. &
vb. n.Zincking or Zincing (&?;).] To
coat with zinc; to galvanize.
Zinc"ane (?), n.(Chem.)Zinc chloride. [Obs.]
Zinc"ic (?), a.(Chem.)Pertaining to, containing, or resembling, zinc;
zincous.
Zinc"ide (?), n.A binary compound
of zinc. [R.]
Zinc*if"er*ous (?), a. [Zinc +
-ferous.] Containing or affording zinc.
Zinc`i*fi*ca"tion (?), n.The act
or process of applying zinc; the condition of being zincified, or
covered with zinc; galvanization.
Zinc"i*fy (?), v. t. [Zinc + -
fy.] (Metal.)To coat or impregnate with
zinc.
Zinc"ite (?), n.(Min.)Native zinc oxide; a brittle, translucent mineral, of an orange-
red color; -- called also red zinc ore, and red oxide of
zinc.
{Zinck"ing, or Zinc"ing (?) },
n.(Metal.)The act or process of
applying zinc; galvanization.
Zinck"y (?), a.Pertaining to zinc,
or having its appearance. [Written also zinky.]
Zin"co- (?). A combining form from zinc; in
chemistry, designating zinc as an element of certain double
compounds. Also used adjectively.
Zinc"ode (?), n. [Zinc + -
ode, as in electrode.] (Elec.)The positive
electrode of an electrolytic cell; anode. [R.]
Miller.
Zin*cog"ra*pher (?), n.An engraver
on zinc.
{ Zin`co*graph"ic (?), Zin`co*graph"ic*al (?), }
a.Of or pertaining to zincography; as,
zincographic processes.
Zin*cog"ra*phy (?), n. [Zinco- +
-graphy.] The art or process of engraving or etching on
zinc, in which the design is left in relief in the style of a wood
cut, the rest of the ground being eaten away by acid.
Zinc"oid (?), a. [Zinc + -
oid.] Pertaining to, or resembling, zinc; -- said of the
electricity of the zincous plate in connection with a copper plate in
a voltaic circle; also, designating the positive pole.
[Obs.]
Zin`co-po"lar (?), a. [Zinco- +
polar.] (Elec.)Electrically polarized like the
surface of the zinc presented to the acid in a battery, which has
zincous affinity. [Obs.]
Zinc"ous (?), a.1.(Chem.)(a)Of, pertaining to, or
containing, zinc; zincic; as, zincous salts.(b)Hence, formerly, basic, basylous, as opposed
to chlorous.
2.(Physics)Of or pertaining to the
positive pole of a galvanic battery; electro-positive.
||Zin"ga*ro (?), n.; pl.Zingari (#). [It.] A gypsy.
Zing"el (z&ibreve;ng"el), n.(Zoöl.)A small, edible, freshwater European perch
(Aspro zingel), having a round, elongated body and prominent
snout.
Zin`gi*ber*a"ceous
(z&ibreve;n`j&ibreve;*b&etilde;r*ā"shŭs),
a. [L. zingiber ginger. See Ginger.]
(Bot.)Of or pertaining to ginger, or to a tribe
(Zingibereæ) of endogenous plants of the order
Scitamineæ. See Scitamineous.
Zink (z&ibreve;&nsm;k), n.(Chem.)See Zinc. [Obs.]
Zink"en*ite (-en*īt), n.
[From Zinken, director at one time of the Hanoverian mines.]
(Min.)A steel-gray metallic mineral, a sulphide of
antimony and lead.
Zink"y (?), a.See
Zincky.Kirwan.
||Zin"ni*a (?), n. [NL. So called after
Professor Zinn, of Göttingen.] (Bot.)Any
plant of the composite genus Zinnia, Mexican herbs with
opposite leaves and large gay-colored blossoms. Zinnia elegans
is the commonest species in cultivation.
Zinn"wald*ite (?), n. [So called after
Zinnwald, in Bohemia, where it occurs.] (Min.)A
kind of mica containing lithium, often associated with tin
ore.
Zin"sang (?), n.(Zoöl.)The delundung.
Zin`zi*ber*a"ceous (?), a.(Bot.)Same as Zingiberaceous.
Zi"on (?), n. [Heb.
tsīy&?;n, originally, a hill.]
1.(Jewish Antiq.)A hill in Jerusalem,
which, after the capture of that city by the Israelites, became the
royal residence of David and his successors.
2.Hence, the theocracy, or church of
God.
3.The heavenly Jerusalem; heaven.
Ziph"i*oid (?), n.(Zoöl.)See Xiphioid.
Zir"co- (?). (Chem.)A combining form (also
used adjectively) designating zirconium as an element of
certain double compounds; zircono-; as in zircofluoric acid,
sodium zircofluoride.
Zir`co*flu"or*ide (?), n.(Chem.)A double fluoride of zirconium and hydrogen, or some other
positive element or radical; as, zircofluoride of
sodium.
Zir"con (?), n. [F., the same word as
jargon. See Jargon a variety of zircon.] (Min.)A mineral occurring in tetragonal crystals, usually of a brown or
gray color. It consists of silica and zirconia. A red variety, used
as a gem, is called hyacinth. Colorless, pale-yellow or smoky-
brown varieties from Ceylon are called jargon.
Zircon syenite, a coarse-grained syenite
containing zircon crystals and often also elæolite. It is
largely developed in Southern Norway.
Zir"co*na (?), n. [NL.] (Chem.)Zirconia.
Zir"con*ate (?), n.(Chem.)A salt of zirconic acid.
Zir*co"ni*a (?), n. [NL.] (Chem.)The oxide of zirconium, obtained as a white powder, and
possessing both acid and basic properties. On account of its
infusibility, and brilliant luminosity when incandescent, it is used
as an ingredient of sticks for the Drummomd light.
Zir*con"ic (?), a.(Chem.)Pertaining to, containing, or resembling, zirconium; as,
zirconic oxide; zirconic compounds.
Zirconic acid, an acid of zirconium analogous
to carbonic and silicic acids, known only in its salts.
Zir*co"ni*um (?), n. [NL.]
(Chem.)A rare element of the carbon-silicon group,
intermediate between the metals and nonmetals, obtained from the
mineral zircon as a dark sooty powder, or as a gray metallic
crystalline substance. Symbol Zr. Atomic weight, 90.4.
Zir"co*no (?). See Zirco-.
Zir"con*oid (?), n. [Zircon +
oid.] (Crystallog.)A double eight-sided pyramid, a
form common with tetragonal crystals; -- so called because this form
often occurs in crystals of zircon.
Zith"er (?), n. [G. zither. See
Cittern.] (Mus.)An instrument of music used in
Austria and Germany. It has from thirty to forty wires strung across a
shallow sounding-board, which lies horizontally on a table before the
performer, who uses both hands in playing on it. [Not to be confounded
with the old lute-shaped cittern, or cithern.]
Zit"tern (?), n.(Min.)See
Cittern.
||Zi*za"ni*a (?), n. [NL., from L.
zizanium darnel, cockle, Gr. &?;.] (Bot.)A genus
of grasses including Indian rice. See Indian rice, under
Rice.
Ziz"el (?), n. [G. ziesel.]
(Zoöl.)The suslik. [Written also
zisel.]
||Zo`an*tha"ce*a (?), n. pl. [NL., from
Gr. zw^,on an animal + &?; flower.] (Zoöl.)A suborder of Actinaria, including Zoanthus and allied
genera, which are permanently attached by their bases.
||Zo`an*tha"ri*a (?), n. pl. [NL.]
(Zoöl.)Same as Anthozoa.
Zo`an*tha"ri*an (?), a.(Zoöl.)Of or pertaining to the Zoantharia. --
n.One of the Anthozoa.
Zo*an"tho*deme (?), n. [See
Zoantharia, and Deme.] (Zoöl.)The
zooids of a compound anthozoan, collectively.
Zo*an"thoid (?), a. [See
Zoantharia, and -oid.] (Zoöl.)Of or
pertaining to the Zoanthacea.
Zo*an"thro*py (?), n. [Gr. &?; animal +
&?; man.] (Med.)A kind of monomania in which the patient
believes himself transformed into one of the lower animals.
||Zo*an"thus (?), n. [NL. See
Zoantharia.] (Zoöl.)A genus of Actinaria,
including numerous species, found mostly in tropical seas. The zooids
or polyps resemble small, elongated actinias united together at their
bases by fleshy stolons, and thus forming extensive groups. The
tentacles are small and bright colored.
||Zo"bo (?), n. [Native name.]
(Zoöl.)A kind of domestic cattle reared in Asia for
its flesh and milk. It is supposed to be a hybrid between the zebu and
the yak.
{ Zoc"co (?), Zoc"co*lo (?), }
n. [It. fr. L. socculus. See Socle,
and cf. Zacco.] (Arch.)Same as
Socle.
Zo"cle (?; 277), n.(Arch.)Same as Socle.
Zo"di*ac (?), n. [F. zodiaque
(cf. It. zodiaco), fr. L. zodiacus, Gr. &?; (sc. &?;),
fr. &?;, dim. of zw^,on an animal, akin to &?; living, &?;
to live.]
1.(Astron.)(a)An
imaginary belt in the heavens, 16° or 18° broad, in the middle
of which is the ecliptic, or sun's path. It comprises the twelve
constellations, which one constituted, and from which were named, the
twelve signs of the zodiac.(b)A figure
representing the signs, symbols, and constellations of the
zodiac.
2.A girdle; a belt. [Poetic & R.]
By his side,
As in a glistering zodiac, hung the sword.
Milton.
Zo*di"a*cal (?), a. [Cf. F.
zodiacal.] (Astron.)Of or pertaining to the
zodiac; situated within the zodiac; as, the zodiacal
planets.
Zodiacal light, a luminous tract of the sky,
of an elongated, triangular figure, lying near the ecliptic, its base
being on the horizon, and its apex at varying altitudes. It is to be
seen only in the evening, after twilight, and in the morning before
dawn. It is supposed to be due to sunlight reflected from multitudes
of meteoroids revolving about the sun nearly in the plane of the
ecliptic.
||Zo"ë*a (?), n. [NL., fr. Gr. &?;
life.] (Zoöl.)A peculiar larval stage of certain
decapod Crustacea, especially of crabs and certain Anomura.
[Written also zoæa.]
&fist; In this stage the anterior part of the body is relatively
large, and usually bears three or four long spines. The years are
conspicuous, and the antennæ and jaws are long, fringed organs
used in swimming. The thoracic legs are undeveloped or rudimentary,
the abdomen long, slender, and often without appendages. The
zoëa, after casting its shell, changes to a megalops.
Zo"e*trope (?), n. [Gr. &?; life + &?;
turning, from &?; to turn.] An optical toy, in which figures made
to revolve on the inside of a cylinder, and viewed through slits in
its circumference, appear like a single figure passing through a
series of natural motions as if animated or mechanically
moved.
||Zo"har (?), n. [Heb.
zōhar candor, splendor.] A Jewish cabalistic book
attributed by tradition to Rabbi Simon ben Yochi, who lived about the
end of the 1st century, a. d. Modern critics believe it to be
a compilation of the 13th century.Encyc. Brit.
Zo"ic (?), a. [Gr. &?;.]
(Zoöl.)Of or pertaining to animals, or animal
life.
Zo"ide (?), n.(Biol.)See
Meride.
Zo*il"e*an (?), a.Having the
characteristic of Zoilus, a bitter, envious, unjust critic, who
lived about 270 years before Christ.
Zo"i*lism (?), n.Resemblance to
Zoilus in style or manner; carping criticism; detraction.
Bring candid eyes the perusal of men's works, and let
not Zoilism or detraction blast well-intended
labors.
Sir T. Browne.
Zois"ite (?), n. [After its discoverer,
Von Zois, an Austrian mineralogist.] (Min.)A
grayish or whitish mineral occurring in orthorhombic, prismatic
crystals, also in columnar masses. It is a silicate of alumina and
lime, and is allied to epidote.
||Zo"kor (?), n.(Zoöl.)An Asiatic burrowing rodent (Siphneus aspalax) resembling
the mole rat. It is native of the Altai Mountains.
||Zoll"ve*rein` (?), n. [G., from
zoll duty + verein union.] Literally, a customs
union; specifically, applied to the several customs unions
successively formed under the leadership of Prussia among certain
German states for establishing liberty of commerce among themselves
and common tariff on imports, exports, and transit.
&fist; In 1834 a zollverein was established which included most of
the principal German states except Austria. This was terminated by the
events of 1866, and in 1867 a more closely organized union was formed,
the administration of which was ultimately merged in that of the new
German empire, with which it nearly corresponds territorially.
Zom"bo*ruk (?), n.(Mil.)See Zumbooruk.
||Zo"na (?), n.; pl.Zonæ (#). [L., a girdle. See Zone.]
A zone or band; a layer.
Zona pellucida. [NL.] (Biol.)(a)The outer transparent layer, or envelope, of
the ovum. It is a more or less elastic membrane with radiating
striæ, and corresponds to the cell wall of an ordinary cell.
See Ovum, and Illust. of Microscope.(b)The zona radiata. -- Zona
radiata [NL.] (Biol.), a radiately striated
membrane situated next the yolk of an ovum, or separated from it by a
very delicate membrane only.
Zon"al (?), a. [L. zonalis.]
Of or pertaining to a zone; having the form of a zone or
zones.
Zonal equation(Crystallog.), the
mathematical relation which belongs to all the planes of a zone, and
expresses their common position with reference to the axes. --
Zonal structure(Crystallog.), a
structure characterized by the arrangements of color, inclusions,
etc., of a crystal in parallel or concentric layers, which usually
follow the outline of the crystal, and mark the changes that have
taken place during its growth. -- Zonal
symmetry. (Biol.)See the Note under
Symmetry.
Zo"nar (?), n. [Mod. Gr. &?; a girdle,
fr. Gr. &?;, dim. of &?; a girdle. See Zone.] A belt or
girdle which the Christians and Jews of the Levant were obliged to
wear to distinguish them from Mohammedans. [Written also
zonnar.]
||Zo*na"ri*a (?), n. pl. [NL.]
(Zoöl.)A division of Mammalia in which the placenta
is zonelike.
Zon"ate (?), a.(Bot.)Divided by parallel planes; as, zonate tetraspores, found
in certain red algæ.
Zone (zōn), n. [F. zone, L.
zona, Gr. zw`nh; akin to zwnny`nai to
gird, Lith. jůsta a girdle, jůsti to gird,
Zend yāh.] 1.A girdle; a
cincture. [Poetic]
An embroidered zone surrounds her
waist.
Dryden.
Loose were her tresses seen, her zone
unbound.
Collins.
2.(Geog.)One of the five great
divisions of the earth, with respect to latitude and
temperature.
&fist; The zones are five: the torrid zone, extending
from tropic to tropic 46° 56&min;, or 23° 28&min; on each side
of the equator; two temperate or variable zones,
situated between the tropics and the polar circles; and two
frigid zones, situated between the polar circles and the
poles.
Commerce . . . defies every wind, outrides every
tempest, and invades.
Bancroft.
3.(Math.)The portion of the surface
of a sphere included between two parallel planes; the portion of a
surface of revolution included between two planes perpendicular to the
axis.Davies & Peck (Math. Dict.)
4.(Nat. Hist.)(a)A
band or stripe extending around a body.(b)A band or area of growth encircling anything; as, a zone
of evergreens on a mountain; the zone of animal or vegetable
life in the ocean around an island or a continent; the Alpine
zone, that part of mountains which is above the limit of tree
growth.
5.(Crystallog.)A series of planes
having mutually parallel intersections.
6.Circuit; circumference. [R.]
Milton.
Abyssal zone. (Phys. Geog.)See under
Abyssal. -- Zone axis(Crystallog.), a straight line passing through the center
of a crystal, to which all the planes of a given zone are
parallel.
Zone, v. t.To girdle; to
encircle. [R.] Keats.
Zoned (?), a.1.Wearing a zone, or girdle.Pope.
2.Having zones, or concentric bands;
striped.
3.(Bot.)Zonate.
Zone"less (?), a.Not having a
zone; ungirded.
The reeling goddess with the zoneless
waist.
Cowper.
In careless folds, loose fell her zoneless
vest.
Mason.
Zon"nar (?), n.See
Zonar.
Zon"u*lar (?), a.Of or pertaining
to a zone; zone-shaped. "The zonular type of a
placenta." Dana.
Zon"ule (?), n.A little zone, or
girdle.
Zon"u*let (?), n.A zonule.Herrick.
Zon"ure (?), n. [Zone + Gr. &?;
tail.] (Zoöl.)Any one of several of South African
lizards of the genus Zonura, common in rocky
situations.
Zo"ö- (?). A combining form from Gr.
zwo^,n an animal, as in zoögenic,
zoölogy, etc.
Zo`ö*chem"ic*al (?), a.Pertaining to zoöchemistry.
Zo`ö*chem"is*try (?), n.
[Zoö- + chemistry.] Animal chemistry;
particularly, the description of the chemical compounds entering into
the composition of the animal body, in distinction from
biochemistry.
Zo*öch"e*my (?), n. [Zoö-
+ Gr. &?; alchemy.] Animal chemistry;
zoöchemistry.Dunglison.
||Zo`ö*chlo*rel"la (?), n. [NL.,
dim. from Gr. zw^,on an animal + &?; green.]
(Zoöl.)One of the small green granulelike bodies
found in the interior of certain stentors, hydras, and other
invertebrates.
Zo"ö*cyst (?), n. [Zoö-
+ cyst.] (Biol.)A cyst formed by certain Protozoa
and unicellular plants which the contents divide into a large number
of granules, each of which becomes a germ.
||Zo`ö*cy"ti*um (?), n.; pl.Zoöcytia (#). [NL., fr. Gr. zw^,on
an animal + &?; a hollow vessel.] (Zoöl.)The common
support, often branched, of certain species of social
Infusoria.
||Zo`ö*den"dri*um (?), n.;
pl.Zoödendria (#). [NL., fr. Gr.
zw^,on an animal + &?; a tree.] (Zoöl.)The branched, and often treelike, support of the colonies of
certain Infusoria.
||Zo*œ"ci*um (?), n.; pl.Zoœcia (#). [NL., fr. Gr. zw^,on an
animal + &?; house.] (Zoöl.)One of the cells or
tubes which inclose the feeling zooids of Bryozoa. See Illust.
of Sea Moss.
Zo`ö*e*ryth"rine (?), n.
[Zoö- + Gr. &?; red.] (Zoöl.)A peculiar
organic red coloring matter found in the feathers of various
birds.
Zo*ög"a*mous (?), a. [Zoö-
+ Gr. &?; marriage.] (Biol.)Of or pertaining
zoögamy.
Zo*ög"a*my (?), n.(Biol.)The sexual reproduction of animals.
Zo`ö*gen"ic (?), a. [Zoö-
+ -gen + -ic: cf. Gr. &?; born of an animal.]
(Biol.)Of or pertaining to zoögeny, animal
production.
{ Zo*ög"e*ny (?), Zo*ög"o*ny (?), }
n. [Zoö- + root of Gr. &?; to be born,
&?; offspring.] The doctrine of the formation of living
beings.
Zo`ö*ge`o*graph"ic*al (?), a.Of or pertaining to zoögraphy.
Zo`ö*ge*og"ra*phy (?), n.
[Zoö- + geography.] The study or description
of the geographical distribution of animals.
||Zo`ö*glœ"a (?), n. [NL.,
from Gr. zw^,on an animal + &?; any glutinous substance.]
(Biol.)A colony or mass of bacteria imbedded in a viscous
gelatinous substance. The zoöglœa is characteristic of a
transitory stage through which rapidly multiplying bacteria pass in
the course of their evolution. Also used adjectively.
Zo*ög"ra*pher (?), n.One who
describes animals, their forms and habits.
{ Zo`ö*graph"ic (?), Zo`ö*graph"ic*al
(?), } a. [Cf. F. zoographique.] Of or
pertaining to the description of animals.
Zo*ög"ra*phist (?), n.A
zoögrapher.
Zo*ög"ra*phy (?), n. [Zoö-
+ -graphy: cf. F. zoographie.] A description
of animals, their forms and habits.
Zo"oid (?), a. [Zoö- + -
oid.] (Biol.)Pertaining to, or resembling, an
animal.
Zo"oid, n.1.(Biol.)An organic body or cell having locomotion, as a
spermatic cell or spermatozooid.
2.(Zoöl.)(a)An
animal in one of its inferior stages of development, as one of the
intermediate forms in alternate generation.(b)One of the individual animals in a composite group, as of
Anthozoa, Hydroidea, and Bryozoa; -- sometimes restricted to those
individuals in which the mouth and digestive organs are not
developed.
Zo*oid"al (?), a.Of or pertaining
to a zooid; as, a zooidal form.
Zo*öl"a*try (?), n. [Zoö-
+ Gr. &?; worship.] The worship of animals.
Zo*öl"o*ger (?), n.A
zoölogist.Boyle.
Zo`ö*log"ic*al (?), a. [Cf. F.
zoologique.] Of or pertaining to zoölogy, or the
science of animals.
Zo`ö*log"ic*al*ly, adv.In a
zoölogical manner; according to the principles of
zoölogy.
Zo*öl"o*gist (?), n. [Cf. F.
zoologiste.] One who is well versed in
zoölogy.
Zo*öl"o*gy (?), n.; pl.Zoölogies (#). [Zoö- + -
logy: cf. F. zoologie. See Zodiac.]
1.That part of biology which relates to the
animal kingdom, including the structure, embryology, evolution,
classification, habits, and distribution of all animals, both living
and extinct.
2.A treatise on this science.
Zo`ö*mel"a*nin (?), n.
[Zoö- + melanin.] (Physiol. Chem.)A
pigment giving the black color to the feathers of many
birds.
Zo`ö*mor"phic (?), a. [Zoö-
+ Gr. &?; form.] Of or pertaining to
zoömorphism.
Zo`ö*mor"phism (?), n.1.The transformation of men into beasts.
[R.] Smart.
2.The quality of representing or using animal
forms; as, zoömorphism in ornament.
3.The representation of God, or of gods, in
the form, or with the attributes, of the lower animals.
To avoid the error of anthropomorphism, we fall into
the vastly greater, and more absurd, error of
zoömorphism.
Mivart.
||Zo"ön (?), n.; pl.Zoa (#). [NL., fr. Gr. zw^,on an animal.]
(Zoöl.)(a)An animal which is the
sole product of a single egg; -- opposed to zooid.H.
Spencer.(b)Any one of the perfectly
developed individuals of a compound animal.
Zo*ön"ic (?), a. [Gr.
zw^,on an animal: cf. F. zoonique.] Of or
pertaining to animals; obtained from animal substances.
Zo"ö*nite (?), n.(Zoöl.)(a)One of the segments of
the body of an articulate animal.(b)One
of the theoretic transverse divisions of any segmented
animal.
Zo*ön"o*my (?), n. [Zoö-
+ Gr. &?; a law: cf. F. zoonomie.] The laws of animal
life, or the science which treats of the phenomena of animal life,
their causes and relations.
Zo"ö*nule (?), n. [Dim. fr. Gr.
zw^,on an animal.] (Zoöl.)Same as
Zoönite.
Zo`ö*pa*thol"o*gy (?), n.
[Zoö- + pathology.] Animal
pathology.
||Zo*öph"a*ga (?), n. pl. [NL., fr.
Gr. &?; animal + &?; to eat.] (Zoöl.)An artificial
group comprising various carnivorous and insectivorous
animals.
Zo*öph"a*gan (?), n.(Zoöl.)A animal that feeds on animal food.
Zo*öph"a*gous (?), a. [Gr. &?;;
zw^,on an animal + &?; to eat.] Feeding on
animals.
&fist; This is a more general term than either sarcophagous
or carnivorous.
Zo*öph"i*list (?), n. [Zoö-
+ Gr. &?; to love.] A lover of animals.Southey.
Zo*öph"i*ly (?), n.Love of
animals.
Zo"ö*phite (?), n.A
zoöphyte. [R.]
Zo`ö*phor"ic (?), a. [Gr. &?;;
zw^,on an animal + &?; to bear; cf. F. zoophorique.]
Bearing or supporting the figure of an animal; as, a
zoöphoric column.
||Zo*öph"o*rous (?), n. [L., fr.
Gr. &?;. See Zoöphoric.] (Anc. Arch.)The
part between the architrave and cornice; the frieze; -- so called from
the figures of animals carved upon it.
||Zo*öph"y*ta (?), n. pl. [NL.,
from Gr. zw^,on an animal + fyto`n a plant.]
(Zoöl.)An extensive artificial and heterogeneous
group of animals, formerly adopted by many zoölogists. It
included the cœlenterates, echinoderms, sponges, Bryozoa,
Protozoa, etc.
&fist; Sometimes the name is restricted to the Cœlentera, or
to the Anthozoa.
Zo"ö*phyte (?), n. [F.
zoophyte, Gr. &?;; zw^,on an animal + &?; plant,
akin to &?; to be born, to be. See Zodiac, and Be,
v. i.] (Zoöl.)(a)Any one of numerous species of invertebrate animals which more or
less resemble plants in appearance, or mode of growth, as the corals,
gorgonians, sea anemones, hydroids, bryozoans, sponges, etc.,
especially any of those that form compound colonies having a branched
or treelike form, as many corals and hydroids.(b)Any one of the Zoöphyta.
{ Zo`ö*phyt"ic (?), Zo`ö*phyt"ic*al
(?), } a. [Cf. F. zoophytique.]
(Zoöl.)Of or pertaining to zoöphytes.
Zo*öph"y*toid (?), a.
[Zoöphyte + -oid.] (Zoöl.)Pertaining to, or resembling, a zoöphyte.
Zo`ö*phyt`o*log"ic*al (?), a. [Cf.
F. zoophytologique.] Of or pertaining to
zoöphytology; as, zoöphytological
observations.
Zo*öph`y*tol"o*gy (?; 277), n.
[Zoöphyte + -logy: cf. F. zoophytologie.]
The natural history zoöphytes.
Zo`ö*prax"i*scope (?), n.
[Zoö- + Gr. &?; a doing, an acting (from &?; to do) + -
scope.] An instrument similar to, or the same as, the, the
phenakistoscope, by means of which pictures projected upon a screen
are made to exhibit the natural movements of animals, and the
like.
Zo`ö*psy*chol"o*gy (?), n.
[Zoö- + psychology.] Animal
psychology.
Zo"ö*sperm (?), n. [Zoö-
+ sperm.] (Biol.)One of the spermatic
particles; spermatozoid.
||Zo`ö*spo*ran"gi*um (?), n.;
pl.-sporangia (#). [NL. See Zoö-
, and Sporangium.] (Bot.)A spore, or
conceptacle containing zoöspores.
Zo"ö*spore (?), n. [Zoö-
+ spore.]
1.(Bot.)A spore provided with one or
more slender cilia, by the vibration of which it swims in the water.
Zoöspores are produced by many green, and by some olive-brown,
algæ. In certain species they are divided into the larger
macrozoöspores and the smaller microzoöspores. Called also
sporozoid, and swarmspore.
2.(Zoöl.)See
Swarmspore.
Zo`ö*spor"ic (?), a.Of or
pertaining to zoöspores; of the nature of
zoöspores.
Zo*öt"ic (?), a. [Gr.
zw^,on an animal.] Containing the remains of organized
bodies; -- said of rock or soil.
Zo`ö*tom"ic*al (?), a. [Cf. F.
zootomique.] Of or pertaining to zoötomy.
Zo*öt"o*mist (?), n. [Cf. F.
zootomiste.] One who dissects animals, or is skilled in
zoötomy.
Zo*öt"o*my (?), n. [Zoö-
+ Gr. &?; to cut: cf. F. zootomie.] The dissection or
the anatomy of animals; -- distinguished from
androtomy.
Zo`ö*troph"ic (?), a. [Gr. &?;.
See Zoö-, and Trophic.] (Physiol.)Of
or pertaining to the nourishment of animals.
Zope (?), n. [G.] (Zoöl.)A European fresh-water bream (Abramis ballerus).
Zo"pi*lote (?), n. [Sp.]
(Zoöl.)The urubu, or American black
vulture.
Zor"il (?), n.(Zoöl.)Same as Zorilla.
Zo*ril"la (?), n. [Sp. zorilla,
zorillo, dim. of zorra, zorro, a fox: cf. F.
zorille.] (Zoöl.)Either one of two species of
small African carnivores of the genus Ictonyx allied to the
weasels and skunks. [Written also zoril, and
zorille.]
&fist; The best-known species (Ictonyx zorilla) has black
shiny fur with white bands and spots. It has anal glands which produce
a very offensive secretion, similar to that of the skunk. It feeds
upon birds and their eggs and upon small mammals, and is often very
destructive to poultry. It is sometimes tamed by the natives, and kept
to destroy rats and mice. Called also mariput, Cape
polecat, and African polecat. The name is sometimes
erroneously applied to the American skunk.
Zo`ro*as"tri*an (?), a.Of or
pertaining to Zoroaster, or his religious system.
Zo`ro*as"tri*an (?), n.A follower
of Zoroaster; one who accepts Zoroastrianism.
Zo`ro*as"tri*an*ism (?), n.The
religious system of Zoroaster, the legislator and prophet of the
ancient Persians, which was the national faith of Persia; mazdeism.
The system presupposes a good spirit (Ormuzd) and an opposing evil
spirit (Ahriman). Cf. Fire worship, under Fire, and
Parsee.
Zo`ro*as"trism (?), n.Same as
Zoroastrianism.Tylor.
||Zos"ter (?), n. [L., fr. Gr. &?;
girdle, zoster. See Zone.] (Med.)Shingles.
||Zos"te*ra (?), n. [NL.] (Bot.)A genus of plants of the Naiadaceæ, or Pondweed
family. Zostera marina is commonly known as sea wrack,
and eelgrass.
||Zos"ter*ops (?), n. [NL., fr. Gr. &?;
girdle + &?;, &?;, the eye.] (Zoöl.)A genus of birds
that comprises the white-eyes. See White-eye.
Zouave (?; 277), n. [F., fr. Ar.
Zouaoua a tribe of Kabyles living among the Jurjura mountains
in Algeria.] (Mil.)(a)One of an active
and hardy body of soldiers in the French service, originally Arabs,
but now composed of Frenchmen who wear the Arab dress.(b)Hence, one of a body of soldiers who adopt
the dress and drill of the Zouaves, as was done by a number of
volunteer regiments in the army of the United States in the Civil War,
1861-65.
Zounds (?), interj. [Contracted from
God's wounds.] An exclamation formerly used as an oath,
and an expression of anger or wonder.
Zoutch (?; 277), v. t.(Cookery)To stew, as flounders, eels, etc., with just enough or liquid to
cover them.Smart.
Zubr (z&oomac;br), n. [Polish
żubr.] (Zoöl.)The aurochs.
Zuche (z&oomac;ch), n.A stump of a
tree.Cowell.
Zu*chet"to (?), n. [It.
zucchetto.] (R. C. Ch.)A skullcap covering the
tonsure, worn under the berretta. The pope's is white; a cardinal's
red; a bishop's purple; a priest's black.
||Zu"fo*lo (?; 277), n. [It.]
(Mus.)A little flute or flageolet, especially that which
is used to teach birds. [Written also zuffolo.]
Zui"sin (?), n.(Zoöl.)The American widgeon. [Local, U. S.]
Zu"lus (z&oomac;"l&oomac;z), n. pl.;
sing.Zulu (-l&oomac;). (Ethnol.)The most important tribe belonging to the Kaffir race. They
inhabit a region on the southeast coast of Africa, but formerly
occupied a much more extensive country. They are noted for their
warlike disposition, courage, and military skill.
Zum*boo"ruk (?), n. [Turk. & Ar.
zambūrak, fr. Ar. zambūr a hornet.]
(Mil.)A small cannon supported by a swiveled rest on the
back of a camel, whence it is fired, -- used in the East.
Zu"mic (?), a., Zu`mo*log"ic*al
(&?;), a., Zu*mol"o*gy (&?;),
n., Zu*mom"e*ter (&?;),
n., etc. See Zymic, Zymological,
etc.
Zu"ñis (?), n. pl.; sing.
Zuñi (&?;). (Ethnol.)A tribe
of Pueblo Indians occupying a village in New Mexico, on the
Zuñi River.
Zun"yite (?), n.(Min.)A
fluosilicate of alumina occurring in tetrahedral crystals at the
Zuñi mine in Colorado.
||Zwan"zi*ger (tsvän"ts&esl;*g&etilde;r),
n. [G.] An Austrian silver coin equivalent to
20 kreutzers, or about 10 cents.
||Zy*gan"trum (?), n.; pl.Zygantra (#). [Gr. zygo`n a yoke + &?; a
cave, hole.] (Anat.)See under
Zygosphene.
Zyg`a*poph"y*sis (?), n.; pl.Zygapophyses (#). [Gr. zygo`n a yoke + E.
apophysis.] (Anat.)One of the articular processes
of a vertebra, of which there are usually four, two anterior and two
posterior. See under Vertebra. --
Zyg`ap*o*phys"i*al (#), a.
Zyg"e*nid (?), n. [Cf. Gr. &?;, probably
the hammer-headed shark.] (Zoöl.)Any one of numerous
species of moths of the family Zygænidæ, most of
which are bright colored. The wood nymph and the vine forester are
examples. Also used adjectively.
||Zyg`o*bran"chi*a (?), n. pl. [NL.,
from Gr. zygo`n a yoke + &?; a gill.] (Zoöl.)A division of marine gastropods in which the gills are developed
on both sides of the body and the renal organs are also paired. The
abalone (Haliotis) and the keyhole limpet (Fissurella)
are examples.
Zyg`o*bran"chi*ate (?), a.(Zoöl.)Of or pertaining to the
Zygobranchia.
||Zyg`o*dac"ty*læ (?), n. pl.
[NL.] (Zoöl.)The zygodactylous birds. In a
restricted sense applied to a division of birds which includes the
barbets, toucans, honey guides, and other related birds.
||Zyg`o*dac"ty*li (?), n. pl. [NL.]
(Zoöl.)Same as Scansores.
{ Zyg`o*dac"ty*lic (?), Zyg`o*dac"tyl*ous (?;
277), } a. [Gr. zygo`n a yoke, pair + &?;
finger, toe: cf. F. zygodactyle.] (Zoöl.)Yoke-footed; having the toes disposed in pairs; -- applied to
birds which have two toes before and two behind, as the parrot,
cuckoo, woodpecker, etc.
||Zy*go"ma (?), n. [NL., fr. Gr. &?;,
fr. &?; to yoke, zygo`n a yoke.] (Anat.)(a)The jugal, malar, or cheek bone.(b)The zygomatic process of the temporal
bone.(c)The whole zygomatic
arch.
Zyg`o*mat"ic (?; 277), a. [Cf. F.
zygomatique.] (Anat.)Of, pertaining to, or in the
region of, the zygoma.
Zygomatic arch, the arch of bone beneath the
orbit, formed in most mammals by the union of the malar, or jugal,
with the zygomatic process of the temporal bone. In the lower
vertebrates other bones may help to form it, and there may be two
arches on each side of the skull, as in some reptiles. --
Zygomatic process, a process of the temporal or
squamosal bone helping to form the zygomatic arch.
{ Zyg`o*mor"phic (?), Zyg`o*mor"phous (?), }
a. [Gr. zygo`n a yoke + &?; form.]
(Biol.)Symmetrical bilaterally; -- said of organisms, or
parts of organisms, capable of division into two symmetrical halves
only in a single plane.
Zyg"o*phyte (?), n. [Gr.
zygo`n a yoke + fyto`n a plant.] (Bot.)Any plant of a proposed class or grand division
(Zygophytes, Zygophyta, or Zygosporeæ), in
which reproduction consists in the union of two similar cells. Cf.
Oöphyte.
||Zy*go"sis (?), n. [NL., fr. Gr. &?;
balancing, fr. zygo`n yoke.] (Biol.)Same as
Conjugation.
Zyg"o*sperm (?), n. [Gr.
zygo`n a yoke + E. sperm.] (Bot.)A
spore formed by the union of the contents of two similar cells, either
of the same or of distinct individual plants. Zygosperms are found in
certain orders of algæ and fungi.
Zyg"o*sphene (?), n. [Gr.
zygo`n a yoke + &?; a wedge.] (Anat.)A median
process on the front part of the neural arch of the vertebræ of
most snakes and some lizards, which fits into a fossa, called the
zygantrum, on the back part of the arch in front.
Zyg"o*spore (?), n. [Gr.
zygo`n a yoke + E. spore.] (Bot.)(a)Same as Zygosperm.(b)A spore formed by the union of several
zoöspores; -- called also zygozoöspore.
Zy"lon*ite (?), n. [Gr. &?; wood.]
Celluloid.
Zym"ase (?), n. [From Zyme.]
(Physiol. Chem.)A soluble ferment, or enzyme. See
Enzyme.
Zyme (?), n. [Gr. &?; leaven.]
1.A ferment.
2.(Med.)The morbific principle of a
zymotic disease.Quain.
Zym"ic (?), a.(Old Chem.)Pertaining to, or produced by, fermentation; -- formerly, by
confusion, used to designate lactic acid.
Zym"o*gen (?), n. [Zyme + -
gen.] (Physiol. Chem.)A mother substance, or
antecedent, of an enzyme or chemical ferment; -- applied to such
substances as, not being themselves actual ferments, may by internal
changes give rise to a ferment.
The pancreas contains but little ready-made ferment,
though there is present in it a body, zymogen, which gives
birth to the ferment.
Foster.
Zym"o*gene (?), n. [Zyme + root
of Gr. &?; to be born.] (Biol.)One of a physiological
group of globular bacteria which produces fermentations of diverse
nature; -- distinguished from pathogene.
Zym`o*gen"ic (?), a.(Biol.)(a)Pertaining to, or formed by, a
zymogene.(b)Capable of producing a
definite zymogen or ferment.
Zymogenic organism(Biol.), a
microörganism, such as the yeast plant of the Bacterium
lactis, which sets up certain fermentative processes by which
definite chemical products are formed; -- distinguished from a
pathogenic organism. Cf. Micrococcus.
{ Zy`mo*log"ic (?), Zy`mo*log"ic*al (?), }
a. [Cf. F. zymologique.] Of or
pertaining to zymology.
Zy*mol"o*gist (?), n.One who is
skilled in zymology, or in the fermentation of liquors.
Zy*mol"o*gy (?), n. [Zyme + -
logy: cf. F. zymologie.] A treatise on the
fermentation of liquors, or the doctrine of fermentation.
[Written also zumology.]
Zy"mome (?), n. [Gr. &?; a fermented
mixture.] (Old Chem.)A glutinous substance, insoluble in
alcohol, resembling legumin; -- now called vegetable fibrin,
vegetable albumin, or gluten casein.
{ Zy*mom"e*ter (?), Zy`mo*sim"e*ter (?), }
n. [Gr. &?; ferment, or &?; fermentation + -
meter: cf. F. zymosimètre.] An instrument for
ascertaining the degree of fermentation occasioned by the mixture of
different liquids, and the degree of heat which they acquire in
fermentation.
Zym"o*phyte (?), n. [Zyme + Gr.
fyto`n a plant.] (Physiol. Chem.)A bacteroid
ferment.
Zy*mose" (?), n.(Chem.)Invertin.
||Zy*mo"sis, n. [NL., fr. Gr. &?;
fermentation, fr. &?; ferment.] (Med.)(a)A fermentation; hence, an analogous process by which an
infectious disease is believed to be developed.(b)A zymotic disease. [R.]
Zy*mot"ic (?), a. [Gr. &?; causing to
ferment, fr. &?; to ferment, &?; ferment, leaven.]
1.Of, pertaining to, or caused by,
fermentation.
2.(Med.)Designating, or pertaining
to, a certain class of diseases. See Zymotic disease,
below.
Zymotic disease(Med.), any epidemic,
endemic, contagious, or sporadic affection which is produced by some
morbific principle or organism acting on the system like a
ferment.
Zy"them (?), n.See
Zythum.
Zy*thep"sa*ry (?), n. [Gr. &?; a kind of
beer + &?; to boil.] A brewery. [R.]
||Zy"thum (?), n. [L., fr. Gr. &?; a
kind of beer; -- so called by the Egyptians.] A kind of ancient
malt beverage; a liquor made from malt and wheat. [Written also
zythem.]
Webster's New Haven home, where he wrote An American Dictionary of the English Language. Now located in Greenfield Village in Michigan.
Noah Webster (October 16, 1758 – May 28, 1843) was an American lexicographer, textbook pioneer, English spelling reformer, political writer, editor, and prolific author. He has been called the "Father of American Scholarship and Education." His "blue-backed Speller," his "Grammars," and "Reader," all contained Biblical and patriotic themes and Webster led the production of educational volumes emphasizing Christian Constitutional values for more than a century. "In my view, the Christian religion is the most important and one of the first things in which all children, under a free government ought to be instructed...No truth is more evident to my mind than that the Christian religion must be the basis of any government intended to secure the rights and privileges of a free people." 1 Webster considered "education useless without the Bible" but he cautioned against too extensive use of the Bible in schools as "tending to irreverence,"
In 1774, at the age of 16, he matriculated at Yale College in New Haven, studying with the learned Ezra Stiles, Yale's president. His four years at Yale overlapped with the American Revolutionary War, and because of food shortages, many of his college classes were held in other towns. He served in the Connecticut Militia. His father had mortgaged the farm to send Webster to Yale, but the son was now on his own and had no more to do with his family.3 After graduating Yale in 1778, he taught school in Glastonbury, Hartford, and West Hartford. He was admitted to the bar in 1781 and practiced after 1789. Discovering that law was not to his liking, he tried teaching, setting up several very small schools that did not thrive.
Political vision
Webster was by nature a revolutionary, seeking American independence from the cultural thralldom to Britain. To replace it he sought to create a utopian America, cleansed of luxury and ostentation and the champion of freedom4 By 1781, Webster had an expansive view of the new nation. American nationalism was superior to Europe because American values were superior, he claimed.5
America sees the absurdities--she sees the kingdoms of Europe, disturbed by wrangling sectaries, or their commerce, population and improvements of every kind cramped and retarded, because the human mind like the body is fettered 'and bound fast by the chords of policy and superstition': She laughs at their folly and shuns their errors: She founds her empire upon the idea of universal toleration: She admits all religions into her bosom; She secures the sacred rights of every individual; and (astonishing absurdity to Europeans!) she sees a thousand discordant opinions live in the strictest harmony ... it will finally raise her to a pitch of greatness and lustre, before which the glory of ancient Greece and Rome shall dwindle to a point, and the splendor of modern Empires fade into obscurity.
Webster dedicated his Speller and Dictionary to providing an intellectual foundation for American nationalism. In 1787-89 Webster was an outspoken supporter of the new Constitution. In terms of political theory, he deemphasized virtue (a core value of republicanism) and emphasized widespread ownership of property (a key element of liberalism). He was one of the few Americans who paid much attention to the French theorist Jean Jacques Rousseau.6
Federalist editor
To the Friends of Literature in the United States, Webster's prospectus for his first dictionary of the English language, 1807–1808
Webster married well and had joined the elite in Hartford but did not have much money. In 1793, Alexander Hamilton lent him $1500 to move to New York City to edit the leading Federalist Party newspaper. In December, he founded New York's first daily newspaper, American Minerva (later known as The Commercial Advertiser), and edited it for four years, writing the equivalent of 20 volumes of articles and editorials. He also published the semi-weekly publication, The Herald, A Gazette for the country (later known as The New York Spectator).
As a Federalist spokesman, he was repeatedly denounced by the Jeffersonian Republicans as "a pusillanimous, half-begotten, self-dubbed patriot," "an incurable lunatic," and "a deceitful newsmonger ... Pedagogue and Quack." Rival Federalist pamphleteer "Peter Porcupine" (William Cobbett) said Webster's pro-French views made him "a traitor to the cause of Federalism", calling him "a toad in the service of sans-cullottism," "a prostitute wretch," "a great fool, and a barefaced liar," "a spiteful viper," and "a maniacal pedant." Webster, the consummate master of words, was distressed. Even the use of words like "the people," "democracy," and "equality" in public debate bothered him, for such words were "metaphysical abstractions that either have no meaning, or at least none that mere mortals can comprehend." 7
Webster followed French radical thought and was one of the few Americans who admired Jean-Jacques Rousseau. He urged a neutral foreign policy when France and Britain went to war in 1793. But when French minister Citizen Genêt set up a network of pro-Jacobin "Democratic-Republican Societies" that entered American politics and attacked President Washington, Webster condemned them. He called on fellow Federalist editors to "all agree to let the clubs alone—publish nothing for or against them. They are a plant of exotic and forced birth: the sunshine of peace will destroy them."8
For decades, he was one of the most prolific authors in the new nation, publishing textbooks, political essays, a report on infectious diseases, and newspaper articles for his Federalist party. He wrote so much that a modern bibliography of his published works required 655 pages. He moved back to New Haven in 1798; he was elected as a Federalist to the Connecticut House of Representatives in 1800 and 1802-1807.
Copyright
Politician Daniel Webster was Noah Webster’s cousin. As a senator, Daniel sponsored Noah’s proposed copyright bill.9 The first major statutory revision of U.S. copyright law, the 1831 Act was a result of intensive lobbying by Noah Webster and his agents in Congress.10
As a teacher, he had come to dislike American elementary schools. They could be overcrowded, with up to seventy children of all ages crammed into one-room schoolhouses. They had poor underpaid staff, no desks, and unsatisfactory textbooks that came from England. The heating system was also a problem with one side of the room that was too cold and the other side that was too hot. Webster thought that Americans should learn from American books, so he began writing a three volume compendium, A Grammatical Institute of the English Language. The work consisted of a speller (published in 1783), a grammar (published in 1784), and a reader (published in 1785). His goal was to provide a uniquely American approach to training children. His most important improvement, he claimed, was to rescue "our native tongue" from "the clamour11 of pedantry" that surrounded English grammar and pronunciation. He complained that the English language had been corrupted by the British aristocracy, which set its own standard for proper spelling and pronunciation. Webster rejected the notion that the study of Greek and Latin must precede the study of English grammar. The appropriate standard for the American language, argued Webster, was, "the same republican principles as American civil and ecclesiastical constitutions", which meant that the people-at-large must control the language; popular sovereignty in government must be accompanied by popular usage in language.
The Speller was arranged so that it could be easily taught to students, and it progressed by age. From his own experiences as a teacher, Webster thought the Speller should be simple and gave an orderly presentation of words and the rules of spelling and pronunciation. He believed students learned most readily when he broke a complex problem into its component parts and had each pupil master one part before moving to the next. Ellis argues that Webster anticipated some of the insights currently associated with Jean Piaget's theory of cognitive development. Webster said that children pass through distinctive learning phases in which they master increasingly complex or abstract tasks. Therefore, teachers must not try to teach a three-year-old how to read; they could not do it until age five. He organized his speller accordingly, beginning with the alphabet and moving systematically through the different sounds of vowels and consonants, then syllables, then simple words, then more complex words, then sentences.12
The speller was originally titled The First Part of the Grammatical Institute of the English Language. Over the course of 385 editions in his lifetime, the title was changed in 1786 to The American Spelling Book, and again in 1829 to The Elementary Spelling Book. Most people called it the "Blue-Backed Speller" because of its blue cover, and for the next one hundred years, Webster's book taught children how to read, spell, and pronounce words. It was the most popular American book of its time; by 1837 it had sold 15 million copies, and some 60 million by 1890—reaching the majority of young students in the nation's first century. Its royalty of a half-cent per copy was enough to sustain Webster in his other endeavors. It also helped create the popular contests known as spelling bees.
Handwritten drafts of dictionary entries by Webster
Slowly, edition by edition, Webster changed the spelling of words, making them "Americanized." He chose s over c in words like defense, he changed the re to er in words like center, and he dropped one of the Ls in traveler. At first he kept the u in words like colour or favour but dropped it in later editions. He also changed "tongue" to "tung," an innovation that never caught on.13
Part three of his Grammatical Institute (1785) was a reader designed to uplift the mind and "diffuse the principles of virtue and patriotism.":14
"In the choice of pieces," he explained, "I have not been inattentive to the political interests of America. Several of those masterly addresses of Congress, written at the commencement of the late Revolution, contain such noble, just, and independent sentiments of liberty and patriotism, that I cannot help wishing to transfuse them into the breasts of the rising generation."
Students received the usual quota of Plutarch, Shakespeare, Swift, and Addison, as well as such Americans as Joel Barlow's Vision of Columbus, Timothy Dwight's Conquest of Canaan, and John Trumbull's poem M'Fingal. He included excerpts from Tom Paine's The Crisis and an essay by Thomas Day calling for the abolition of slavery in accord with the Declaration of Independence.
Webster's Speller was entirely secular. It ended with two pages of important dates in American history, beginning with Columbus's in 1492 and ending with the battle of Yorktown in 1781. There was no mention of God, the Bible, or sacred events. "Let sacred things be appropriated for sacred purposes," wrote Webster. As Ellis explains, "Webster began to construct a secular catechism to the nation-state. Here was the first appearance of 'civics' in American schoolbooks. In this sense, Webster's speller becoming what was to be the secular successor to The New England Primer with its explicitly biblical injunctions." 15 In turn after 1840 Webster's books lost market share to the McGuffey Eclectic Readers of William Holmes McGuffey, which sold over 120 million copies.16
Noah Webster, The Schoolmaster of the Republic. (1886)
Bynack (1984) examines Webster in relation to his commitment to the idea of a unified American national culture that would stave off the decline of republican virtues and solidarity. Webster acquired his perspective on language from such theorists as Mauertuis, Michaelis, and Herder. There he found the belief that a nation's linguistic forms and the thoughts correlated with them shaped individuals' behavior. Thus the etymological clarification and reform of American English promised to improve citizens' manners and thereby preserve republican purity and social stability. This presupposition animated Webster's Speller and Grammar.17
In 1806, Webster published his first dictionary, A Compendious Dictionary of the English Language. In 1807 Webster began compiling an expanded and fully comprehensive dictionary, An American Dictionary of the English Language; it took twenty-seven years to complete. To evaluate the etymology of words, Webster learned twenty-six languages, including Old English (Anglo-Saxon), German, Greek, Latin, Italian, Spanish, French, Hebrew, Arabic, and Sanskrit. Webster hoped to standardize American speech, since Americans in different parts of the country used different languages. They also spelled, pronounced, and used English words differently.
Webster completed his dictionary during his year abroad in 1825 in Paris, France, and at the University of Cambridge. His book contained seventy thousand words, of which twelve thousand had never appeared in a published dictionary before. As a spelling reformer, Webster believed that English spelling rules were unnecessarily complex, so his dictionary introduced American English spellings, replacing "colour" with "color", substituting "wagon" for "waggon", and printing "center" instead of "centre". He also added American words, like "skunk" and "squash", that did not appear in British dictionaries. At the age of seventy, Webster published his dictionary in 1828.
Though it now has an honored place in the history of American English, Webster's first dictionary only sold 2,500 copies. He was forced to mortgage his home to bring out a second edition, and his life from then on was plagued with debt.
In 1840, the second edition was published in two volumes. On May 28, 1843, a few days after he had completed revising an appendix to the second edition, and with much of his efforts with the dictionary still unrecognized, Noah Webster died.
Title page of Webster's Dictionary of the English Language, circa 1830–1840
Austin (2005) explores the intersection of lexicographical and poetic practices in American literature, and attempts to map out a "lexical poetics" using Webster's dictionaries as the. He shows the ways in which American poetry has inherited Webster, has drawn upon his lexicography in order to reinvent it. Austin explicates key definitions from both the Compendious (1806) and American (1828) dictionaries, and brings into its discourse a range of concerns, including the politics of American English, the question of national identity and culture in the early moments of American independence, and the poetics of citation and of definition. Webster's dictionaries were a redefinition of Americanism within the context of an emergent and unstable American socio-political and cultural identity. Webster's identification of his project as a "federal language" shows his competing impulses towards regularity and innovation in historical terms. Perhaps the contradictions of Webster's project comprised part of a larger dialectical play between liberty and order within Revolutionary and post-Revolutionary political debates.18
Webster in early life was something of a freethinker, but in 1808 he became a convert to Calvinistic orthodoxy, and thereafter became a devout Congregationalist who preached the need to Christianize the nation.19 Webster grew increasingly authoritarian and elitist, fighting against the prevailing grain of Jacksonian Democracy. Webster viewed language as a tool to control unruly thoughts. His American Dictionary emphasized the virtues of social control over human passions and individualism, submission to authority, and fear of God; they were necessary for the maintenance of the American social order. As he grew older, Webster's attitudes changed from those of an optimistic revolutionary in the 1780s to those of a pessimistic critic of man and society by the 1820s.20
His 1828 American Dictionary contained the greatest number of Biblical definitions given in any reference volume. Webster considered education "useless without the Bible". Webster released his own edition of the Bible in 1833, called the Common Version. He used the King James Version (KJV) as a base and consulted the Hebrew and Greek along with various other versions and commentaries. Webster molded the KJV to correct grammar, replaced words that were no longer used, and did away with words and phrases that could be seen as offensive.
Opposition to slavery and abolitionism
Webster helped found the Connecticut Society for the Abolition of Slavery in 1791,21, but by the 1830s rejected the new tone among abolitionists that emphasized Americans who tolerated slavery were themselves sinners. In 1837, Webster warned his daughter about her fervent support of the abolitionist cause. "Webster wrote, "slavery is a great sin and a general calamity – but it is not our sin, though it may prove to be a terrible calamity to us in the north. But we cannot legally interfere with the South on this subject." He added, "To come north to preach and thus disturb our peace, when we can legally do nothing to effect this object, is, in my view, highly criminal and the preachers of abolitionism deserve the penitentiary."
Letter from Webster to daughter Eliza, 1837, warning of perils of the abolitionist movement
Family
Rebecca Greenleaf Webster, wife of Noah Webster
Webster married Rebecca Greenleaf (1766–1847) on October 26, 1789, in New Haven, Connecticut. They had eight children:
Emily Schotten (1790–1861), who married William W. Ellsworth, named by Webster as an executor of his will.22 Emily, their daughter, married Rev. Abner Jackson, who became president of both Hartford's Trinity College and Hobart College in New York State.23
Frances Julianna (1793–1869)
Harriet (1797–1844)
Mary (1799–1819)
William Greenleaf (1801–1869)
Eliza (1803–1888)
Henry (1806–1807)
Louisa (b. 1808)
He moved to Amherst, Massachusetts, in 1812, where Webster helped to found Amherst College. In 1822, the family moved back to New Haven, and Webster was awarded an honorary degree from Yale the following year. He is buried in New Haven's Grove Street Cemetery.
^ John H. Westerhoff III, McGuffey and His Readers: Piety, Morality, and Education in Nineteenth-Century America (1978).
^ Vincent P. Bynack, "Noah Webster and the Idea of a National Culture: the Pathologies of Epistemology." Journal of the History of Ideas 1984 45(1): 99-114.
^ Nathan W. Austin, "Lost in the Maze of Words: Reading and Re-reading Noah Webster's Dictionaries," Dissertation Abstracts International, 2005, Vol. 65 Issue 12, p. 4561
"Noah Webster" in The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes (1907–21). vol 18 section 25:33 online edition
Bynack, Vincent P. "Noah Webster and the Idea of a National Culture: the Pathologies of Epistemology." Journal of the History of Ideas 1984 45(1): 99-114. Issn: 0022-5037 in Jstor
Ellis, Joseph J. After the Revolution: Profiles of Early American Culture 1979. chapter 6, interpretive essay online edition
Gallardo, Andres. "The Standardization of American English." PhD dissertation State U. of New York, Buffalo 1980. 367 pp. DAI 1981 41(8): 3557-A. 8104193, focused on Webster's dictionary
Kendall, Joshua, "The Definition of Yankee Know-How," Los Angeles Times (October 15, 2008)
Lepore, Jill. "Noah's Mark: Webster and the original dictionary wars." The New Yorker, (November 6, 2006). 78-87.
Malone, Kemp. "Webster, Noah," Dictionary of American Biography, Volume 10 (1936)
Micklethwait, David. Noah Webster and the American Dictionary (2005)
Morgan, John S. Noah Webster (1975), popular biography
Moss, Richard J. Noah Webster. (1984). 131 pp. Wester as author
Nelson, C. Louise. "Neglect of Economic Education in Webster's 'Blue-Backed Speller'" American Economist, Vol. 39, 1995 online edition
Proudfit, Isabel. Noah Webster Father of the Dictionary (1966).
Rollins, Richard. The Long Journey of Noah Webster (1980) (ISBN 0-8122-7778-3)
Rollins, Richard M. "Words as Social Control: Noah Webster and the Creation of the American Dictionary." American Quarterly 1976 28(4): 415-430. Issn: 0003-0678 in Jstor
Snyder, K. Alan. Defining Noah Webster: Mind and Morals in the Early Republic. (1990). 421 pp.
Southard, Bruce. "Noah Webster: America's Forgotten Linguist." American Speech 1979 54(1): 12-22. Issn: 0003-1283 in Jstor
Unger, Harlow Giles. Noah Webster: The Life and Times of an American Patriot (1998), scholarly biography
Warfel, Harry R. Noah Webster: Schoolmaster to America (1936), a standard biography
Primary sources
Harry R. Warfel, ed., Letters of Noah Webster (1953),
Homer D. Babbidge, Jr., ed., Noah Webster: On Being American (1967), selections from his writings
Webster, Noah. The American Spelling Book: Containing the Rudiments of the English Language for the Use of Schools in the United States by Noah Webster1836 edition online, the famous Blue- Backed Speller
Webster, Noah. An American dictionary of the English language1848 edition online
Webster, Noah. A grammatical institute of the English language1800 edition online
Webster, Noah. History of the United States published in 1832
Webster, Noah. Miscellaneous papers on political and commercial subjects‎1802 edition online mostly about banks
Webster, Noah. A collection of essays and fugitiv writings: on moral, historical, political and literary subjects1790 edition online 414 pages
External links
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