HAB 
Mr. Winflow has obferved, that the different motions of 
the bones of the foot, which are very free in their natural 
ftate, as it is very plainly feen in young children. are ufually 
wholly loit to us as we grow up, by means of the improper 
preffure of out thoes. See the partic illuftration of 
thefe beat pasa in Mem Paris, 1740. 
ABIT is particularly ufed for ‘alesis orm garments of 
the religious, conformable to the rule and order whereof they 
make — as the habit of St. Benedié, of St. Au- 
guitine 
the habit ; meaning, he has entered upon a noviciate in a cer- 
tain order. So heis {aid to ig the habit, 3 ae he ee 
the eects ‘Bee Vow 
elty ; the founders 
£ hiefly ‘fulebignms of de- 
ferts and folitudes, gave their ion the habit ufual among 
country people. Accerdingly, the — habits of 
St. Anthony, St. Hilarion, St. Benedi&, 
by the ancient wri 
ples the habit of re 
s th cano 
be $ worn to that time. And the like beet be faid of the 
uits, Barnabites, Theatins, Orato c. who took 
rians, 
pig common habit of the ecclefiaftics at ee Bat of their 
what makes them differ fo much from 
as from the ctcléfattical “habit of the 
prefent an * that they have always kept invariably to 
the fame fo as the ecelefiaftics and laics have bee 
hese aber on every oecafion. 
The sovleteticel habit only commenced about the time of 
y the Great, i.e. it only began at that time to be 
from y habit; vz, in the fixth cen- 
tury. othe eftablifhment of the barbaro 
occafion thereof; for the laymen pane the habit of the na- 
vomits had fubmitted to, but the riefts kept to the Ro- 
Phe abbot Bodese hab au exprefs ieaiile on gs eccle- i 
fiaftical habit ; wherein he maintains, con 
opinion and cuftom, that the ecclefiaftical 
ihort one, and that a fhort habit is more decent than a long 
ene. For the eee habit of fr prefs among ey Jews, 
Pri 
HAB fel ut See Sytvia Cam efiris. 
HABITAT iON, : -awctinggic, ‘or houfe ; whi 
" Hanerasiox is fometimes alfo ufed for cobabitation. 
"the TE and Rerute, i in party a ae the common opi- 
Best | le, among ia with re 
to any circ ano aane sm 3 : 3 oc him. me. Ee. 
ommon 
An 
HABITUAL = aes sa Liecetue & bobs ae oe 
tides ‘Thus we fay iistea wineae Hoke bel, 
fin, . 
‘Haservas Graces See Grace. ae 
Hascrono, | it nthe Seay vy ies the 
Wry oS * 
In chia “fate we fay abfolutely, fuch a eens mn taken 
of Ptol 
us nations was the: 
ithe f. 
of Sayn; 17 miles 
HAC 
In this fenfe, habitude is one of Ariftotle’s eutegoenm Se 
RELATION. - 
Hasitune is alfoufed, in Philofophy, for what we para 
larly call habit ; w. a certain difpofition, or aptitude, a 
performing or fuffering of certain eee 4 contradted by 
reiterated acts of the fame kind. See BIT. 
BOST, in Geography, a town of Pet in the. Esta) 
vince of Sepefias 5 3; 160 miles S.E. of Z 
-HAB AH, a confiderable river of ca, “in the 
weitern province of Algiers, which falls into chart yer fo 
alled from a numerous tribe of Arabs who live 
its banks. The mouth of thefe confluent oe 
El Muckdah, or the Ford, whi 
the fand 
ch, except rainy 
eafon, leaves dry. This was probably se —_ 
aa | 
tolem 
HABSBURG, or Hapspurc, a bailiwick of wit- 
rite in the canton ws Lucerne oo a cattle, fituated 
HEIM, a town of France, in the sepa a 
Upper. Rhine, and chief place of a canton, in the diftrié: 
of Altkirch ; g miles N.N.E. of Altkirch. The place 
contains 1416, and the canton 12,681 inhabitants, on ec 
ritory of 2221 kiliometres, in 17 communes. : 
BU, a village of Egypt, in which are the rune of a 
ire ao temple, and near which is the celebrated ftatue 
Memnon, and another coloffal flatue ; feated on the let 
Q 
o 
Tyee a town of Peru, in the diocefe of Linas 
45 miles S.E. of Nafca. 
HACBOTE, in Old Writers a recompence or amends 
for violence offered 
yernment 
of reat Sethekk This diftri& is yi 2 ontwo 
es, viz. N. and N.W. by the ocean, and ont the third, E. 
by the Soak of Venezuela. Eta town of the fame name is 
of th fo the f-me ap- 
pie acg which is navigable for li = ee and the harbour 
of which is expofed to the N. wind. ‘The environs are very 
ertile ; they i mines of gold and precious ftones ; 3 and on 
the coatt is a pear’ The int hse 
tiie with tigers, ar and the river = with alligator. 8. 
i Rod, a town of A fia, in the Lingo 
HACHENBURG, a pete ‘Serna pind the county 
NE. 50° o 3 
Ler and Hacuine. See Hatene.2 
of Coblentz. 
-~ HACHOWKA [nt 2 sage nant Po! land, in 
miles N. of. Z : 
—— magne 
ih 
- 
oy gee 9 applied to aie 
‘ie manele ps ae oak ocak Bar ay, 
