FORCE, 
eight miles without refting, as their ordinary work ; anda 
horfe at Stourbridge carried 11 hundred: weight of iron, or 
1232 ae unds for eight miles Defaguliers, Exp. Philof, 
’ Forée. Conti- ‘Day’ s 
nuance, ork. 
‘Work of Mules. . 
Cazanel fays, that a mule works 
in- the Weft Indies — — 
out of’about 18, wit orce 
about 150 a i nae tines 
feet in a feco 4.5 | 2° 4o'l 12 
Inanimate force —According to M.Coulomb, a wind- 
mill ath four faile meafuring 66 feet Fr. from one extre- 
mity to that of the oppofite fail, and fix feet wide, or a 
little more, is shir of raifing 1000 pounds Fr. 218 feet in 
1’; and of working on an average eight hours in a day. 
Thisis equiv alent to the work of 34 men, as it has been above 
eftimated, 2 aed feet of canvas performing about the 
daily wor 
Robifon f on fays, eon a hundred weight of coals burned in 
a fteam engine will raife at leaft 20,000 cubic feet of water 
24 feet high ; this is equivalent to the daily labour of 8.32 
men: A {team engine in London, with a 24-inch cylinder, 
does the work of 72 horfes, and a chaldron of coals in aday; m 
each bufhel bein equivalent to two horfes, and each fquare 
in ee of the c Fine — =“ the work o 
acc count of it its own weig 
Sica 
Tc bacee Uitradlive. 
Force; Central, 
“Force, Centrifugal. 
‘Force, Centripetal. 
Force of Cobefion. 
Force, Contradile. ContTrRaAc 
‘Force, Llaftic. See Exasrtic, aa Ge eee: 
Force; Elearical. See ELEcTRICITY, 
See ATTRACTION. 
See CENTRAL. 
See CENTRIFUGALe 
See CENTRIPETAL, 
Force of JnaGivity. See Vis inertia. 
Force, Janate. See Vis in infita. 
Forcz, Magnetic. ee Macnetis 
fion 
moter Moving. See Vis motrix, and preceding article, 
C the 
Force, Repelling. See Rerursion. 
Foxcz, Refifing. See Resistance. 
Force, Retarding. See RETARDATION. 
Force of Wind. ss hierar c. 
fies an offence, by which 
violence is ufed either to Solan or things. 
apes is either /anpié,: or compou 
zr, Mixed or compound, is v sole mgd committed with 
ae faG, hee of itfelf alone were c a asi 
man by force enter into’ pa eal 's poffeftio 
kill a man or adil a woinan, &c.. oo Hom MICIDE, 
Forces, Simple, is that which has no other crime adjoined 
to it: if one, by force, enter into another man’s. pofleffion, 
lea doing any other un 
is alfo divided into true force, or force after a 
are ee branches ; 3 as s forcible entries, forcible 
detaining, or holding unlawful affe embly, routs, riots, re- 
bellions, &c. See the eis ue 
Ponce, 
ar, ad: fo ome other arts, is applied to 
a thing which ftands in leu of, or has the fame effe&, as 
aig In our language the / between two vowels has 
or power of a ne and is fometimes put fora x: as 
ca onen, baptifin 
In Hebrew, the 
the force of a eed “_ effed, 
has the force of te 
» Fr. and Eng 
ng, 
‘ape th; and in Arabie, the tefdid, have . 
a unit ‘before a cypher 
mete 
oft. ti 
on is too great, and an inftrument or voice is force 
fo und becomes cite and —— to ci 
force the voice beyond its power, in order to be 
heard in a large room or theatre, deftroys ‘il its propor- 
tions, by exceeding its eee or {cale of founds, and 
becomes fereaming inftead o Forcing the tone 
has the fame effe& on intruments whether their founds are 
d it is for this reafon 
Pa 
o 
os 
cS 
Ra) 
“et 
colours ead either in E oneE on 
dark, In other words, it marks the degree of their 
approach in effect, to the natural appearance of the original 
in nature. Force, t erefore, in this view, correfponds i in 
mealure with effect in painting (fee Errecr); but its unifon 
vith i 
2 
fon] 
it is confined to this point alone. 
hough it is a quality of a very ufeful kind when judi- 
cioufly applied in a picture, it is by no means neceffary to 
only in fome 
character of mo [ $e ee in fubje&ts of a tender and. 
elicate nature. e pofitive oe of objeds,. 
ta h ties ise ‘ple, — or er Aosta difgutt, 
ving the foft and. 
uld, b inpdnhee 
oft 
ine epeiog, oe thee sores wo 
_ itfelf too powerfully on the fight, deftroy the effect mo 
ae a to be produce 
en in dust ptae ticularly of ladies where the expref-. 
ion is coor am able c 
- er. 
of men in general}. particularly if their charaéters. 
are fivongly marked,, of a bold‘or grand kind, and ex — 
7: FGOR 
