1242 



GLOSS A RIAL ENDEX. 



Bout of tin- plough, the going and returning with 

 the plough along a land ur ridge under ploughing, 



7.'/x drains, explained, s. 3607. |». 5S1. 



II '!/'/, a v.it <>r tub, a 7064. p. 1' i 



as, from braird, ; 17. p *'~. 



ow, I . . ■ 



ry, a conttrainlng wheel divided Into joints, which 

 stops when needed another wheel that revolves 

 within it. 



Bramble bondt, bands made of tl '.oots of 



the bramble or ulacklw rry, ■ 3191. p 



Braxy, explained, a '. 



Break-share, explained, t 



era hedge, cutting it down, p. 189. 



Brecchin, tli t part of the horse's harness attached 

 to the saddle, and booked on the shafts, which 

 enables him t.i push back the cart or other 

 machine t<> which he is harnesse I 



Breeding m the line, or in the same line, explained, 

 p. SOL 



ng in mi. I iii, explained, p. 301. 



Breeding, cross, explained, p. 301. 



Brochen ligger, a quarter-cleft rod, as thick as the 

 linger, and four feet in length, used in thatching, 

 I '18. 



,'; ose, a Scotch dish made bypouring boiling wa- 

 ter un oatmeal, and sometimes on the meal of 

 peas, and immediately mixing them by stirring ; 

 leaving the meal in small knots or lumps about 

 the sixe of marbles. It is afterwards eaten with 

 milk or butter, s. 5J17. p. 837. 



Burgage-holding, explained, s. 3404. p. 552. 



Butts, short angular ridges, short irregularly shaped 

 lands or ridges in the corners of fields, s. 3i.j3. 

 p 527. 



JSyre, cow-shed, s. 8777. p. 1015. 



c. 



Cadence, as applied to horsemanship, an equal 

 measure or proportion observed by a horse in all 

 his motions when he is thoroughly managed, and 

 works justly at a gallop, terra a terra, so that 

 his motions or times have an equal regard to each 

 other, s. iii>7-. p. 1003. See Crabb's Technological 

 Dictionary. 



Caissons, temporary chests in which foundations in 

 deep water are built, s. 4357. p. 718. 



Calcareous soil, soil abounding with lime, p. 775. 



Callipers, or calibers, explained, s.4)75. p. 66 i. 



Cn/oriii-re, from culor, heat, and fero, to bear, ex- 

 plained, s. 74of. p. 10s7. 



Camping potatoes, explained, s. 5345. p. 851. 



Canon of the horse, explained, s. 6232. p. 959. 



Cantte, the protuberant part of the saddle behind, 

 75. p. 1()'J3. 



Capillaries, the hair-like extremities of the arte- 

 1 ies and veins, s. 6352. p. 9 



Cap of straw, explained, s. S195 p. 518. 



Caprioles, leaps made in one and the same place 

 Without advancing forward, s. b'u7-. p. 1003. See 

 Crabb's Tech. Diet. 



Capulet, explained, s. (>512. p. 997. 



Carotid arteries, two principal arteries which carrv 

 the blood to the head, s. t,3<i8. p. 972. 



Carotids, 967. See Carotid arteries. 



I 'arpus, explained, s. 6317. p. 965. 



ige in irrigation, explained, s. 4408. p. 726. 



, explained, >. I., i k p. 747. 



I nla lachrymalis, explained, s. 6370. p. 970. 



Caseous, of the nature of cheese, b. 6979 p. in 16. 



Castrate, to incapacitate male animals from engen- 

 dering offspring, b, 7 106. p. 1069. See Spay, 



Ciilch.it in in, explained, s. Hill. p. 727. 



Catch-work meadows, explained, s. 4488 p. 727. 



Cavesson, a sort of nose band, either of iron, leather, 

 or wood, fastened round the nose of a horse to 

 forward the suppling and breaking of the horse, 

 . >7. p. 100L See Crabb's Tech. Did. 



Cellular membrane, an important membrane in 

 animals in which the lat is lodged, p. 785. 



Cereal grasses, the kinds producing corn, p 

 Cerebral huatids, explained, s. 7267, 7268. p. 1 66. 

 Cervical ligament, an aponeurosis or strong band. 



of packwax, which runs along the neck and 

 upholds the head, p, "7 J. 

 Chambri&re, a kind of lung whip used in riding 



houses, s.6662. p. 1001. 

 Char wood, to, to partially burn it to enable it to 

 i -t wet, s. 30 9. p. 192, 



ck, tin' Mn'ii'h arvensis, a wild species of 

 the mustard family, i 



tide of calcium, quicklime, -. H>s8. p. 810. 

 Chyle, a milky iluid secreted from the aliments in 



the lacteal vessels 

 Chyme, that poultice like mass to which the food is 



reduced in the stomach of everv animal, s. 6404. 



p. 975. 



Hse, to heal over with a scar, p. 513. 

 Cilia, eyelashes, p. 970. 

 • ,ui, expl :ined, s. 7348. p. 1065. 

 Clinches, cramps or holdfasts ; to clinch, to turn 



the points of nails which have been driven, as ill 



the shoeing of horses, 6. 6710. p. Iuu7. 

 Ctough, explained, s. 4455. p. 7 J. 

 Cub, a kind of wicker basket, made so as to be car- 

 ried on the arm ; hence a seed-cub, or seed-lip, 



is a basket for sowing from, p. 378. 

 Cockle oast, a kind of kiln lor drying hops upon, 



s. 6043. p. 927. 

 Caff", a Cornish term for ofTal pilchards, p. 1172. 

 ('. ffln tunc, a bone in the foot of the horse, s. uil7. 



p. 976. 

 Coherent soil, a soil whose parts stick together, p. 772. 

 Collar-blade or haims, short segments of wood or 



metal, embracing the neck of the horse, to which 



the traces are attached, s. 3235. p. 524. 

 Cu/lop, explained, s. 7871. P. 12 0. 

 Commutation of tithes, the substituting a fixed 



money payment, or a portion of land, instead of a 



tenth of the produce. 

 Concha cartilages, the gristles of the car, s. 0764. 



p. 1013. 

 Condition of a horse, the state of health and 



strength, p. 977. 

 Consecutive, following, p. 5~~>. 

 < 'opyhold, explained, s. 3395. p. 552. 

 Cordis eocdles, or chorda? vocales, tendons called 



into action by braying in the ass, s. 6765 p. 1013. 

 Cornea, the first or outer coat of the eve, .. 



p. 970. 

 Cornetti, a mode of riding, s. fib/2, p. 1003. 

 Corollary, a consequent truth gained from some 



preceding truth or demonstration, s. 4961. p. 804. 

 Coronal roots, explained, b. 4983. p. 8j8. 

 Coronary, explained s. 6417. p. 976. 

 Cotyledon, the first or seed leaf or seed lobe of a plant 

 Couples, chains, collars, or mechanical contrivances, 



by which dogs, &c. are coupled together. 

 Courses, explained, s. 3189. p. 518. 

 Crest, upper part of a hedge. bank, p 4S3. 

 Croppers, a variety of pigeon, p. 1095. 

 Cross-breeding, explained, s. 2023. p. 301. 

 Crown and furrow-ploughing, explained, s. 3256. 



p. 527. 

 Crown scab, a disease in the horse, p. 1007. 

 Crystalline humour, explained, S.6374. p.: '70. 

 Cul mi, stems of grasses, p. 1167. 

 Culmtferous crops, crops of plants whose stems 



yield straw, as wheat, barley, &&, p. 768. 

 Cuib, explained, s. 0513. p. 987. 

 Curl, explained, s. 5371. p. 85 k 

 Curvilinear, formed of curved lines. 

 ( 'tit over, to cut off the top crop, s. +c43. p. 658. 

 Cut ling in horses, explained, s. 6529. p. ^H^- 

 Cut-water of a bridge, the projecting part of the 



pier of a bridge, which is opposed to the current, 



and divides it, s. 3612. p. 58^. 



D. 



Damlriff, scurf, s. 6738. p. 1006. 



Dashing, or dashed. See Lipped and hartal. 



Deait hedges, hedges made with the primings of 

 trees, or with the tops of old hedges which hue 

 been cut down. 



Dead timber, any timber not growing, p. 502. 



Deciduous, shedding the leaves in autumn. 



Decorticated, deprived of the bark, p. 655. 



Defecation, explained, s. 4591. p. 867. 



Dciiilrumrtcr, an implement invented to ascertain 

 the quantity of timber in standing trees, p. 663. 



Deportation, carrying away, removal, p. 519. 



Dew-retting, spreading hemp or flax on grass to 

 expose it to the action of the dews, which expe- 

 dite the separation of the fibre from the feculent 

 matter, s. 5904. p. 916. 



Dewstone, the name of a species of limestone in 

 Nottinghamshire, s.3639. p. 587. 



Diagram, an explanatory sketch, p. 757. 



Diarrhoea, explained, s. t>473. p. 983. 



Diastole, explained, s. 6351. p. 



Digging his toes, in horses, explained, s. (>2S9. p 960 

 (plained p. 196, i,, Cambridgeshire a ditch 

 is called a dike. 



