OCH 
Italian, but eae have bois tranflated into various lan- 
the A Com mmentary 0 the 
beh he ae of fois 
from OXAIS multitude, and KEXTOS, 
i aa a form of government wherein the popu- 
fice has the whole power and adminiftration in its own 
know 
Epil 2 oe ‘Galatians, 7 
ae 
n old Greek name, whofe ety- 
Of, a8 it were, a 
Gen. 266. be Zeylan.g3. Schreb. 354. app. 7 ‘Will 
Sp. PI. v. ae Mart. Mill. Dict. v. 3. Ait. 
Kew. pee 3. 297. Juff. 282, Lamarck illuftr, 
t.472. £4. * Chad and order, Polyandria Monogynia. Nat. 
Ord. Coadunate, Linn. Magnoke, Juff. 
Gen. Ch. Cal. hte inferior, of five, ovate, or ob- 
a 
e 
m five on eacle e, oblong, deciduous. “Stam 
per $ 
1 Seed. Nut Glan, ie 
fh e drupa, with one ke 
. Calyx five-leaved, inferior, permanent. Peta Is 
numerous, “nearly equal. Drupas feveral. a folitary. 
eerie flowered Oc inn. Sp. 
and. v. 1.62. t. 89. oe stalks many- 
Native of the Eaft bai = in- 
e ends of the 
8 long, an 
ng they are beautifuily tinged with pur- 
ple. Flowers in lateral, alternate clufers, large, yellow, in- 
BraGeas {mall, deciduous. Drupas when ripe 
Small-leaved Ochna. Vahl. Sym 
- (Euonymus inermis foliis alternis 
ovatis ferrulatis; Forfk. 
gle-flowered —Native of Ar 
Jorub greatly refembles that of the lait {pecies, but its leaves 
and inflorefcence a confiderably {maller.— Branches round, 
fmooth, covered with an afh-coloured, dotte sae Leaves 
oe quite entire at the bafe, veined, fhining, 
only half an inch long.  Flower-/lalks ee “Gly. gra- 
dually thickening upwards, purple, longer than the leaf.” t 
a 
Cc Rios, in Gengraply. a bay on the N. coaft of 
theifland of Jamaica. N_ lat. 18° 26/. W. long. al 56’. 
OCHODONA, in Zoology. See Lerus A/pinu 
CHOTA, or Oxnora, a aa of Rutflia, uk runs 
into the fea, at the town of ot 
OCHOTSK, or One a ou town, or rather 
narons of Rutlia, which Nae name to a province that is 
Ry and from eh veffels 
OCH 
road. that lie: over mountains, pce = bee he 
woods of larch and beech trees, and e diftance 9 
142° 44’. 
This town is longer than it is wide, a extends from E, 
to W. nearly in a line. On the S. fide is the fea, at - 
Mie from the houfes, with a beach of fiints between. 
e N. the walls are wafhed by the river Okhota, hole 
eee is to the eaftward, or at the extremity of a neck of 
land on which the town is bui:t, and which widens towards 
vernment, 
inquifitive taalie sides ald to cau himfelf with de 
caufes which firft gave rife to the enterprifes of the Ruffian 
colonies-in that country, and which ferved to fix them in it. 
He found, that by the conqueft of the eaftern part of Si- 
_ beria, the Ruffians got poffeffion of the rich mines with which 
they enriched themfelves, and which were held i in little efti- 
rft incurfions into t 
glory to Tabjed every part of this vatt eemitoes © to thar 
aws. Accordingly they made themfelves matters of the 
country as far as Okot{fk, and pufhed their conquefts in the 
north to the river A.nadyr 
that entered its port daily 
opened frefh objects of tr: atic. The bilbane) is the mode 
of traffick adopted at Okottk, whence feveral veflels every 
year fail for America. © When a es to make 
t 
frays the expence of ‘fittin f the diferent articles of 
merchandize, which confift of ftuffs, iron utenfils, glafs 
trinkets, handkerchiefs, brandy, ie and ether com- 
ers and failors have 
Upon their return 
from a voyage, which lafts three, four, or fix years, the 
Owners 
