OUA 
7 bie sa 
Jefus,’’ 2 
great value, though it is meanly printed, and the engravings 
are execrably bad. At the end of the copy now before me 
re fome views of the Jefuit eae in Chili, and of the 
fix principal forts, which were publifhed feparately to be 
purchafed at pleafure. "They are, without exception, the 
very worft I e ? An ies lay of Ovalle’s 
work is in Churchill’s colle@ion. Gen. B 
N, in Geography, a town of Core a3; 53 m 
W.S.W. of Koang.—Alfo, a town of China, in re 
ifland of Hai-nan ; 15 miles S. of Kiong-tcheou 
OUANAMINTHE, a town of Hifpaniola ; 15 miles 
S.E. of Fort Dauphin 
NDERON, in n Zoology. See Srmra Silenus. 
ANDO, in Geography, rovince or duchy of the 
kingdom of Congo i in Africa, “Gtuated between Congo and 
ngola, now in the poffeffion of the Portuguefe, but for- 
merly fubje&, or tributar a o the kings of Congo. Its 
capital, called St. Michael, is er eated on the river Danda, 
ut is a place of no great note. 
OUA RUM, a river of Canada, which rung into 
the St. Lawrence, N. lat. 44° 37'. W. long. 75° 
OUANG-KOA, a town of Corea; 28 miles 5 S.E. 
of Koang-tcheou 
OUANLIN.- HOTUN, a town of Chinefe Tartary ; 
588 miles N.E. of Peking 
OUANNE, a town ae ently in the department of the 
Yonne ; 9 miles 0 
erre 
OUA QUAPH ENOGAW, or / EKANFANOKA, or Ofer 
or rather ake “s ihe between Flint 
t 300 miles in cir- 
fe t feafons "i ee like an cits ge 
and has feveral large sag of rich land, one of w 
ek Indians as the moft blifaful ane 
u 
ories concerning this 
See Picus, lineatus. 
AR, in Geograp yy, a confiderable t r villa of 
Portugal, in the province of Beira; 15 miles ; 
It contains 1300 houfes, of which many are large and hand- 
An arm of the Vouga, which is properly a lake, 
and which is narrow for sa leagues and then becomes 
much broader during a league, then forming a true lake, 
and at length ends in a narrow ae a league ioe ceafes 
clofe to Ovar. 
UARA, a == of Hindooftan, in Bahar; 65 miles 
S.S.W. of Patn 
OUARANGUE, a ieee ae in the Atlantic, near 
the coaft of Africa. N. lat 2, 
OUARDAN. See Vacous 
OUARINE, in Zoology. See Stmia Beelzebub. 
OVARY, in Anatomy. See aia TION 
See Dro 
See Anatomy of BIRps. 
Ovary of Tip. See Fis 
Carolina and a Wisginie 3 eS or 60 ae wide at the Gap, 
and 
450 in length, N.E. and S.W. They abound in coal, lime, 
OUC 
and free-ftone. Their fummits are fi the moft part covered 
with good foil and a variety of timber, and the intervening 
lands are well watered. 
OVA Lear, among Botanifts. See Lea 
OVATION, Ovatto, in the Romar Hiflory,, -y, a leffer 
triumph allowed to commanders for victories won without 
the effufion of much blood; or for the defeating of rebels, 
flaves, a or other unworthy enemies of the republic. 
Their entry was on foot ; fometimes on horfeback; but 
never in a chariot: and they wore crowns of myrtle, called 
ovales ; having all the fenate attending i in their retinue. 
The denomination ovatio, a to Servius, and Plu- 
Others derive it from the found or din of the acclama- 
tions and fhouts of joy, made by the people, in honour of 
the folemnity ; the people and foldiery, on this occaficn, re- 
doubling the letter “ as in the great triumph they did the 
words, fo saa 
The ovation was it introduced in the year of Rome 325, 
in henour of the conful Pofthumius Tubertus, after his de- 
feating the Sabin 
OUBINSKOL “Mounrams, in Geography — 
called rks mountains of Ru which for t the 
fources of the aan 
height se near Bobrofskaia with porphyry, which in the 
north and fouth 1s aba A changed for granite, whofe 
amie, fometimes with gentle, and then with bold afcents, 
furround the moft delightful a a ounding i in odoriferous 
nerbs of various kinds, In 
mountains of fchiftus haley! appear, in which copper-ore 
is dug, and which is, there, under-run by porphyry 
and granite, but in many ae ces apis with chalk. ‘The 
mountains in which are i fources of the Ouba confift of 
5691 Eoglith feet above the water of the river Ouba, which 
devolves its pleafant ftreams Leneath their monitrous cliffs. 
n thefe mountains have been lately found the Filipotskoi 
cae on the Ulba, which promife great fuccefs, together 
with other mines. ‘Tooke’s Ruff. val. 1. 
OUCARRA, a town of Hindooftan, in the Myfore; 
5 miles 8. of Sattimur gulum 
OUCENTA, a town of Naples, in Lavora; 12 miles 
E. of Capua 
OUCH, in our Old Writers, a collar of gold, or fuch 
like_ornament, worn 2 women about their necks. Stat 
; Gone. a town of Switzerland, on the 
va; whichis the port of Laufanne 
OUCHTE eee ere a pea de on n, fivaated in the 
county of Fife, a royal borough 
cerned 
