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OST, OSTENSIBIL'ITY, n. [See Ostensible .] The quality or state of appearing or ...
OS'SUARY, n. [L. ossuarium.] A charnel house; a place where the bones of the dea...
OSSIV'OROUS, a. [L. os, bone, and voro, to eat.] Feeding on bones; eating bones;...
OS'SIFY, v.t. [L. os, bone, anf facio, to form.] To form bone; to change from a ...
OS'SIFRAGE, n. [L. ossifraga. See Ospray .] The ospray or sea-eagle. In Lev 11:1...
OS'SIFIED, pp. Converted into bone, or a hard substance like bone.
OSSIFICA'TION, n. [from ossify.] 1. The change or process of changing from flesh...
OSSIF'IC, a. [L. os, a bone, and facio, to make.] Having power to ossify or chan...
OSSIF'EROUS, a. [L. os, a bone, and fero, to produce.] Producing or furnishing b...
OS'SICLE, n. [L. ossiculum.] A small bone.
OS'SEOUS, a. [L. osseus, from os, a bone.] Bony; resembling bone.
OS'SELET, n. [L. os, osis, a bone.] A hard substance growing on the inside of a ...
OS'PRAY, n. [L. ossifraga; as, a bone, and frango, to break; the bone-breaker.] ...
OSNABURG, n. oz'nburg. A species of coarse linen imported from Osnaburg, in Germ...
OS'MUND, n. A plant, or a genus of plants, osmunda, moonwort. The most remarkabl...
OS'MIUM, n. [Gr. odor.] A metal recently discovered, and contained in the ore of...