FOR 
or the colonies3 a certificate whereof mult be preduced at 
the time of takin ng t ed oaths, 13 Geo. II. cap. 7. fed. 2 
See Sead 
FOR 
refpeé b 
and which induced them 
catechifm, which ia publifhed in the year 1566. e was 
likewife emp lo ti hel them to reform the miffal and Roman 
owever, commanded him to return 
m accomplifhing the 
ad not long eet home before he 
aft office was expired, he withdrew from public life to the 
convent = si a Which he had built ; and here he died 
in the yea His works are a Latin verfion of the 
: 
' publithed 
at London in the. year commentaries, 
ihe on the books of Job and ne Pialms, which are 
oreri, 
FOREJUDGED #he Court, ia L.aqw, is when anofficer or 
attorney of any court is banifhed, or expelled the fame, for 
fome offence; or for not appearing to an action on a bill 
filed againft him 3 in which latter cafe, he is not to be ad- 
d to — ate, till he‘ appear to the bill. Anno 
2 Hen. IV. 
He fhall lofe ay office, and be forejudged the ow &e. 
“* Forejudicare, interdum’ eft male judicare.”’ Spel. Se 
ATTORNEY. 
FOREJUDGER fignities a lg whereby a man 
as deprived, or put by a fae in queftio 
FORE-KNIGHT, in the Sea- hae guage, a piece of 
wood, carved in figure of a man’s head, ‘and faft bolted to 
the beams pee the fecond 
F » in a Bmbenbingy 3 is the fpace or land left 
between ne embankment of a river or marfh and the ftream 
or tide-wa 
Forget LAND, in Fortification, is a {mall {pace of ground 
betw een ome wall of a place and the moat; called alfo derme, 
and Jiz 
apt 
D, or ce in Geography, a point of land 
jutting « out Pe the fea 
For orthy a Herat of England, on the 
N. Sree of the co ent, on which a fea-mark 
has been ereéted by the corporation o 4 the Trinity-houfe, i in 
which light exhibited every n 3 miles N. of Ramf- 
gate. N. lat. §1° 23'. E.long. 1 
Pacers South, a cape of England, on the E. coat 
f the county of Kent, between Dover and Deal, with a 
light. ae oS t. su 8! ong. 1° — 
ORE Eaft, a cape on coaft of North 
America, « on nthe eaft fide of Cook's a. N. lat. 60° 43’. 
de. long. 209° 19 
FOR 
Foreranp, North, a eape on the W. coaft of North 
America, and wett fide of Cook’s inlet, where the Ruffians 
have a fa&tory, with one large houfe, about go feet oe 
and ae wide, inhabited by about 19 Ruffians. N, lat. 
E.1 
= For er S4 a cape on the W. coaft of phe 
America, in Cook’s river. N. lat. 60° 50! W. lon 
151° 20'.—Alfo, a cape in Upper Canada, formerly eae 
Point Palé, on the north tee of lake Erie, oppofite to 
Landguar Be either ~ of the point there is good an- 
chouee for veflels. Near its extremity on. - he fide is a 
pond, | eee tee may os oa from m 
the 
Fore.ranb, Weff, a cape Ww. er of North 
Ae on nthe welt fide of Cook? sinlet. N. lat. 60° 42! 
E. long. 20 re 
FORE-LEGS, thofe fituated on the fore part of the 
cheft, which fhould be ilraight, and well formed in the 
joints. 
FORELLA, in ee a name given by Figulus 
and others to the tr 
FORELOCKS, in a Ship, are little flat wedges, like 
pieces of iron, pte ” the ends of bolts, to keep them from 
flying out of the k 
OIN, a Hunters, is when a hound going 
before the reft of the cry, meets chace, and goes away 
with it. 
ForeLoin, a term denoting a point in cattle; See 
Carrre, and Live Srock. 
cere MAST of a Ship, is a round large piece of 
timber. ed in her fore part, on which is borne the fore- 
fail, and fore top-fail yard. A 
Fore-mast Men, in a n of War, thofe on board 
that ae in the tails ee the Mia furl the fails, 
browfe, trife, and take their turn at the he 
FORENSIC Service. See padi aa ForEIGN. 
FORENSIS Toca. See Toe 
FORENZA, in a ,a eer of Naples, ‘iin Ba- 
filicata; 8 miles S. of Veno 
FORE-RAKE, in Sea i guage. See 
FORE-REACH. The feamen “fay one thip peseatles 
upon another, when both failing together, fhe fails better, 
or outgoes the other. 
FORE-SAIL, the fail = the fore-matt. 
FORESCHOK cacao anciently tignified 
as much as forfak ben in den lan 
e ze the lor 
the tenant; and fo quietly held and poffeffed beyond a ae 
anda ie 
As - we fhould fay, that the tenant, who feeing his 
lands and tenements taken into the lord’s hand, and oo 
feffed fo long, takes not ion courfe appointed by law 
recover them, do ee of a difwow 
or forfake all the right he them. In which cafe 
fuch lands fhall be called forelchoke, fays the flat. 10 Ed. 
a 
aes 
cap. 
FORESHORTENIN G, in Painting, is the art of con- 
veying to the mind the impreffion of the entire length of 
an object, when it is reprefented as viewed in an oblique or 
receding pofition ; 3 in which cafe, the a€tual vifion of it is 
fhortened in line on the receding fide ; e. g. a ftick held with 
ate end towards the obferver appears “fhortened to the view, 
