{ 
5 
| 
pe 
idiopathic difeafe: and the nu 
z HEB 
the abfurdity of employing ate a medley one difcordant eee 
ber 
den remove eo in 1748, to the 
practice in the metropolis, which he conducted with great 
honour and liberality, and with a conftant attention to the 
improvement t of the art, at once adorning and extending the 
ufefulnefs of his profeffion. r. Heberden’s fuggeition 
the public is indebted for the oubbagiae of the “* Me mart 
TranfaGtions of the College of Phyficians,’’ the firft volum 
of which appeared in 1768, and two others fubfequently i in 
ry72and1785; Among the ufeful communications contain- 
ed in thefe volumes, the papers of Dr. Heberden himfelf 
His account of a 
have fince been promulg Seger ee its frequency and im- 
r. Heberden fir gave an 
imall-pox. Dr. Heb od 
to the aos Society, which were woe in its Semntacs 
est 
years advan 
tice in the fummer feafon, and pafled a ie months in a 
in 
m_ He ip: Ade rable old 
ender the loa oe years in 1801, after ponies a nine- 
and if 
1 the more diftant. from truth, 
practitioner will not de 
®t confider the various comparative refults of different modes 
ef treatment, fo. well eit in many_inftances,: as Jes 
valuable to the profe 
. fenfe; and 
his age, and was buried in the Bat church of obey 
ar 
records of experience are per-. 
fet Fong and without any admixture of “hypothe 
3 0 
the, flock “ fas but little augmented, the experienced. 
them 
: os ETB 
€ was a munificent patron of letters and. 
{cience, without diftin@ion of fe& o r pa His conver- 
fation was oo by cheerfulnefs, liberality, and good 
company .was made up of the moft learned 
men of the aK in which he lived. Be the life prefixed ta: 
is Commentaries. Gen, Bio 
HEBERMAYN, in reine Lat Books, a poacher, or a 
fifherman below London bridge ; thus called, becaufe he 
commonly fifhes at ebb-water. 
HEBERTHEPFT, in Ancient Cuffoms, a privilege of 
having the Pret of a thief, and the trial of him, within a 
articular diftri 
HEBRAICA beaten in Natural Hiffory, aname given 
by authors to a very ‘beautiful fea-fhell of the voluta ae 
from a number of which feos to refemble the 
E 
al Hebrew charaters. See 
BRAISM, an idiotifm, or manner of {peaking pe- 
culiar to the Hebrew “i ogee, For the probab’e origin of 
the appellation, fee 
There is no iaderfelsttg even the verfions of the Old: 
ament, without fome Th compe g with the Hebrew ; 
raifms 
iq Leftame 
they are fo full of Heb: 
We have abundance of He braifms borrowed from {crip- 
ture, and naturalized in our own Janguage : : as Son @ of perdi- 
ion ; to fleep in the Lor Jue ty 
musi has given an ample colleétion of the Hebraifms: 
t occur in_the foie Watigs in the firft volume of his. 
exealipst Hebrew which the biblical critic will 
find it not only chal. te bot “abfolately Recelary to confult, in 
order to underftand the phrafeology both of the Old and New 
Teftaments. Thefe sige: conti phage of fingle words, 
which are of three forts, re properly of Hebrew . 
 extraG@, as Meflias, TLS &c. ue a Greek termination, 
an wes Ses ates AfSatie, &c. which retain the Hebrew yi dad 
; fuch as are ve a Greek extract, but uted in a env 
like 45, dabbar, erie i. 37.)3 an 
newly: coined, by which Hebrew oe are e deathated! ce 
ro ram, (Mark, xiv. 71.) Agu, 
ifms are aay in phrafes ; either fuch as e not 
been ufed by other Greek authors, as ed tf life and. 
death for living se dying on xi, .* -); or fuch as have not 
been ufed by other Greek writers in the fame fenfe as in the 
: hear the st of a perfon fignifies to 
ith Gen. iii. 17.. There 
vi. 39, 40+ compar ei. XXxil. 16. Vie Ju: 
“iol 48 with Gen. vii. 2;—the fuperlative degree eX- 
poetics by the addition of @ro;, Acts, vil. 20. compared with 
onah, iil, 3.—Some verbs are as to be ufed wi 
conti from what 
