ONE 
Kahaomerolakala i is about 20 miles S. W. of Whiteftown. 
fi game caught by the men, 
tolerable {ubfiftence. Their pride 
leads them to defpife their neighbours, the Stockbridge and 
Brotherton Indians, for their attention t culture ; 
are divided into three tribes, or clans, by the names of tk 
Wolf, the Bear, andthe Turtle. They have their name from 
their Pagan deity, which fome few of the natives ftill worfhip, 
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bate 
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the — fuppofed itfelf invincible. ‘Thefe Indians are all 
of m 00 aos a that there has not been a pure 
Oneida for eal yea 
ONEI ROCRITICA, OVELCOKEITEX Ng the art of interpret- 
ing dreams, or a method of foretelling future events, by 
means of dreams. 
The word is formed a the Greek, ovEtposy dream, and 
ApbTiKny of xeioicy judgmen Some call it a and 
derive it from ovsgos, se xentew, I poffe/s, I comm 
appears from feveral paffages of fcripture, that ce re was, 
under the Jewifh eine fuch a thing as foretelling 
future events by s; but ay nae was a particular 
gift, or revelation, eae for tha 
t fho eem, hence, that dreams are really fignificative, 
8 
= 
er 
and do forebode fomething to com that is wantin 
among us is the sae vaca or the art of knowing what : 
yet it is the opinion of m at dreams are mere chimeras ; 
bearing, indeed, fome ac io a what has paffed, but none 
to what is tocome. As to the cafe of Jofeph, it was pof- 
fible for God, who knew all things, to difcover to him what 
was in the womb of fate; and, to introduce that, he might 
take the occafion of a dram: 3 not but that he might as well 
have foretold it from any other accident or circumftance 
in orde 
alate which then nee among the o Egypt ians. See 
REAM. 
ONEIROCRITICS, formed from ovtgos, dream, and* 
xgiois, judgment, a title given to interpreters of dreams, 
or a who judge of events from the circumftances of 
ream. 
There i is no great regard to be had to thofe Greek books 
called oneirocritics ; nor do we, ‘indeed, know why the pa- 
triarch of Conftantinople, and others, toa amufe them- 
felves with writing on fo mean a fubje& 
t has given us a colleGtion of the Greek and La- 
But the books themfelves are little lefs but reveries; a kind 
of ea dreams, to explain and account for fleeping ones. 
The fecret of oneiraertieifm according to them all, con- 
fifts in rit aii fuppofed to be between the dream and 
the thing fig — Bee aoe are far from k 
relations is apre ili 
QNG 
ONEIROPOLI, OvELPOTFOROLy or Oneirofcopi, in Antiquity . 
ahaa whofe bufinefs it was to make preditions from 
rea 
ONEMACK Point, in ei ie se hy, the S.W. point of 
the continent of North America, ted * W. coaft, and 
the S. limit of Briftol bay; 82 ‘ea 5.S.W. of cape 
aca on a N. point of that paras bay. Ne 
lat. 54° 30! ong. 163° 30! 
ONEMENSKATA® a lake of Ruffia, in the rive 
Anadyr; 208 miles cada Anadyrfkoi, communicating 
with the gu of Anady 
ONERANDO Pro Rata Portionis, ig Law, a writ 
which lies for a joint-tenant, or tenant in common, when 
a for more rent than the oeaoras of his land 
comes 
O "SON, in Geography, a town ile on the left 
bask of the Nile ; 30 miles N.E. o naar. 
ONEVI, one of the tale Peal. iflandss j in the South 
Pacific ocean, near the N. coaft of Tongataboo; 5 miles 
N.E. of Obfervatory Point. 
ONEZSKOE, a lake of Ruffa, in the government of 
Oionetz; 120 ong, and about 40 at ie hares 
bread containing feveral iflands. N. lat. 61° to 67°. 
E. long. 29° to 
1. 
ONFZANI, a bans of European Turkey, in Moldavia; 
31 miles N.N.E. 0 
A or Capen. Oncar, a market-town and 
parifh in the hundred of Ongar, and county of Effex, 
ngland, is prea at the eee of ro miles W. by S. 
from Chelmsford, and 21 miles N.E. from London. The 
own is fuppofed e of great antiquity, and to have 
been of confiderable importance, firft under the Romans, 
and fubfequently under the Saxons Norm After 
the conquett, a ftr caftle was ereéted here by Richard 
de Lucy, who was chief juftice of England in the Rts of 
Henry IT high mount, called the Keep, a ome 
other remains of this ee are ftill vifible oa a eaft fide 
aed town ; and fro 
fteep winding walk, now carne 
plantation of trees and fhrubs, leads to the fum 
Chipping-Ongar is now a a trifling ae and confifls 
of one long and wide ftre The church, a {mall ftru@ure, 
is remarkable for the caltellated Joop-hole appearance of its 
wi 
e market-day in this town is 
turday weekly, a there are two fairs every year. Ac- 
cording to the patliam s of 181 1, the whole 
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for} 
3 Qa 
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