NOE 
muft not be ufed to pr eae the inclination, as a ve ry {fm {mall 
error in the latitude will m a confiderable error in the 
angle. o be found thus: find the 
angle PS (fig. 1.), cea the place of a a ~ that 
of its node being ee n, we kn 
tang. Pw :: rad. : a % the toelintge of re er 
See Vince’s Elem. of ‘Aftro 
NODHA, in Gengraphy, a rome of ae in the pro- 
vince of Mecran ; 63 miles S.W. of Ki 
ODHEA, a town ‘e Perfia, in the province of Ker- 
man 3 75 miles N.N.E. of Sirgian. 
NODINGEN, an ifland of Sweden, near the W. coaft, 
in the N. fea. N.lat.g7°16'. E. long. 11? 50'.—Alfo, a 
town of Sweden, in Welt Gothland ; ; 12 miles N. of Go- 
thenburg. 
NODULE » Noputus, in Pharmacy, a bag of medi- 
cinal ingredients put into beer, or wine, to give its tinéture 
thereto. Nodules are fometimes alfo parcels of odoriferous 
fimples, tied up ina piece of filk, for the patient to be fre- 
quently {melling to 
NODUS, Kron: See Knor 
Nopus, in Poetry, &c. See Inrricue and Port. 
Nopus, or Node, in Dialling, denotes a point or ho 
the gnomon of adial, by the fhadow or light whereof, either 
the hour of the day in dals without furniture, or the paralle' S 
of the fun’s dechimation, = a place in the ecliptic, &c. in 
dials with furniture, are 
ODUS is alfo ufed for a rie in the cieling of aroom, or 
in the window, for the making of a dial on the floor, wall, 
or the like. 
NOE, in Geography, atown of France, in the department 
of the Unrer Garonne, on the river Garonne; 17 miles S. 
of Touloufe 
OEL, a ede in the Indian fea, near the coalt of 
Siam. N. lat 0° 33'to 10°47’. E. long. 96° 30’ to 96° 
8! 
Noe s, a kind of air, ee to our Chriftmas ee 
a 
_ The a 
der homa ae to the fase anger 
NOERZA, in Zoology. See Musreta Lutreola. 
Basow, in Ceopra apby, an ifland in the Eaft 
Indian fea, near the S. coat of Java, ot 25 miles in cir- 
cumference. SG. lat. 6° 36" E. long. 
orsA Cambaz, or Pula Can riba . i a in the Eaft 
Indian fea, near the 6. ¢ 
oatt of she out 45, miles in cir- 
cumference.  S. lat. aes 
No OESA Comba, a ia iNand i in the Eat ih fea. S., 
Jat. 5° 20’. E. long. 1 
Nogsa Laver, a mall andi in the Eaft Indian a near 
the S. coaft of Ceram. S. lat. 3° 34’. E. long. i. 
Norsa Ne fing, a a ie land in the Eaft Indian on near 
the N. coait o S. lat. 8° g'. E. long. 1269 30’. 
ORSA nes oe fal ya in the Eaft Indian fea. S. 
lat. 5°15’. E. long. 11 
NOETIANS, s Bef 1 Hi forys difciples of Noe- 
tus, an Ephefian, th bellius. 
hey only allowed of one perfon in the godhead ; viz. the 
r; and accordingly taught, that it was God the Father 
that fuffered on the crofs. Anerror, fays Epiphanius, who 
wrote a hundred years after Noetus, never heard of before ; 
though it is na there had eee: other patripaffians in the 
church befor 
Being seo headed by his fuperiors, Noetus made them 
Vou. XXV. 
NOG 
this anfwer: ‘* What harm have I done? I adore only one 
od; [ownnone but him. He was born, fuffered, and is 
dead.”” 
e the longeft 
unding in its totality, divides itfelf, _e only 
produces he found of one of its third parts. The immove- 
able points, which are the divifions, act as fo many bridges, 
and thefe are what M. Sauveur calls nodes, naming them a 
the fame time fwellings or undulations of the evel 
aliquot parts where the vibrating ftring deviates moft from 
a right line. 
If, inftead of making another and a fhorter ftring found, 
we divide the longeft by fome {mall impediment which will 
check its vibration without totally {topping it, the fame cafe 
will ftill happen in making one of the aliquots found; for 
then both will found in umfon with the fhorteft, and we fhall 
fee the fame neuds and the fame dellies as before 
If the fhorteft part is not an exact aliquot of the longeft, 
but a common aliquot, then there will be no refonance, or 
only that of the fmalleft part, unlefs it is (truck with fuch 
violence as to force oe obftacle, and make the whole ftring 
ound 
mes Sauveur contrived to exhibit thefe nocuds and bellies 
La] 
aise Eni of 
thefe effets Plate Mah Ce Pare Mevenie was the firft who 
difcovered, and demonftrated thefe aoe anes of a 
ounding ftring by experiments. Harm 
NOEWE, in Geography, a town of A neticn in the ftate 
of Tenneffee ; 21 miles S. of Knoxville. 
OFESCH, in Natural Hiftory, a word of Hebrew 
origin, ufed as the name of a precious ftone. There has 
been much difpute among the commentators on the Old Tef- 
Paige what itone it was. It feems derived from the root 
:ALES, in Grgraply a town of pied in Eftra- 
madura ; 20 miles . of Badajoz 
NOGARA, a town of Italy, in the department of the 
Benaco; 13 niles W. of Legrano. a. es a town of the 
county of Tyrol; nine miles N.E. of 
NOGARCOT, a town of Afia, in the mere of Ne- 
paul, in which is a celebrated pagoda; 50 miles N.E. of 
Cath’ma yey N. lat. 28% 11’. E. long. 86° 8. 
NOGARO, a town of France, in the department of the 
Gers, and chief place of a canton, in the diftri@ of os ; 
miles S.W.o0 he place contains 1559, a 
the canton 11,700 inhabitants, on a territory of hemes kil. 
metres, In 42 communes. - tat. 43 © as'. ong. 0° 
NOGAROLA, Lewis, in Biography, an n Italian man “f 
letters, was defeended from an illuftrious family, born at Ve- 
rona towards the com 
applied with great fuccefs to the ftudy of the Greek lan- 
guage, and acquired a high a by the various tei 
one 
