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EPULOT'IC, a. [Gr. to heal, to cicatrize; a cicatrix, to be sound, whole.] Heali...
EPULA'TION, a. [L. eppulatio, from epulor, to feast.] A feasting or feast.
EP'ULARY, a. [L. epularis, from epulum, a feast.] Pertaining to a feast or banquet.
E'POS, n. [Gr.] An epic poem, or its fable or subject. Epsom salt, the sulphate ...
EPOPEE', n. [Gr. a song, to make.] An epic poem. More properly, the history, act...
EP'ODE, n. [Gr. ode.] In lyric poetry, the third or last part of the ode; that w...
E'POCH, n. [L. epocha; Gr. retention, delay, stop, to inhibit; to hold.] 1. In c...
EPIZO'OTY, n. [supra.] A murrain or pestilence among irrational animals.
EPIZOOT'IC, a. [Gr. animal.] In geology, an epithet given to such mountains as c...
EPIT'ROPE EPIT'ROPY, n. [Gr. to permit.] In rhetoric, concession; a figure by wh...
EP'ITRITE, n. [Gr. third.] In prosody, a foot consisting of three long syllables...
EPIT'OMY, n. [Gr. to cut, a cutting, a section.] An abridgment; a brief summary ...
EPIT'OMIZING, ppr. Abridging; shortening; making a summary.
EPIT'OMIZER, n. One who abridges; a writer of an epitome.
EPIT'OMIZED, pp. Abridged; shortened; contracted into a smaller compass, as a bo...
EPIT'OMIZE, v.t. To shorten or abridge, as a writing or discourse; to abstract, ...