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ESTRA'Y, v.i. To stray. [See Stray .] ESTRA'Y , n. A tame beast, as a horse, ox ...
ESTRE'AT, n. [L. extractum, extraho, to draw out.] In law, a true copy or duplic...
ESTRE'ATED, pp. Extracted; copied.
ESTRE'PEMENT, n. [Eng. to strip.] In law, spoil; waste; a stripping of land by a...
ES'TRICH, n. The ostrich, which see.
ES'TUANCE, n. [L. oestus.] Heat. [Not in use.]
ES'TUARY, n. [L. oestuarium, from oestuo, to boil or foam, oestus, heat, fury, s...
ES'TUATE, v.i. [L. oestuo, to boil.] To boil; to swell and rage; to be agitated.
ESTUA'TION, n. A boiling; agitation; commotion of a fluid.
ES'TURE, n. [L. oestuo.] Violence; commotion. [Not used.]
ESU'RIENT, a. [L. esuriens, esurio.] Inclined to eat; hungry.
ES'URINE, a. Eating; corroding. [Little used.] ET CAETERA , and the contraction ...
ETCH, v.t. 1. To make prints on copper-plate by means of lines or strokes first ...
ETCH'ED, pp. Marked and corroded by nitric acid.
ETCH'ING, ppr. Marking or making prints with nitric acid. ETCH'ING , n. The impr...
ETEOS'TIC, n. [Gr. true, and a verse.] A chronogrammatical composition.