FOR 
-Fifon of 300 men. . Near — is.a {mall village of the oa 
name, inhabited only by fill 
FOR LO, a town of Naples » in-the Molif 
miles W. of Molife.—Alfo, a river which runs eee i 
city of Naples into the fea 
FORNICATION, Wokebons € the 2a& or crime of 
incontinency between fingle perfons ; for, if either of the 
The term is de- 
parties be married, it becomes adultery 
rived from the fornices ie ae » where lewd women prof- 
tituted themfelves for 
By the ancient law or England, the firft offence herein 
‘was dea bagi = three months imprifonment : the fecond 
y by an a& paffed A.D. 1650, in the time 
ment.. 
was ma 
of the “farpation - ‘Tue f{piritual court hath cognizance of 
this.offence ; and doing iblie ‘aap is the chief oats 
But b gece 29 “Geo ie foit r uft be in- 
marriage ‘of the o pe parties. For aoa courts-leet 
er ee es as of and punifh fornication and adultery: 
in each courts the king had a fine affeffed on the offenders, 
as appears a ithe book of Domeiday. 2 Inft. 488. 
ORNICATION is fomctimes nfed as a genetical term, in~ 
cludes all kinds of aes againtt cha hit 
nple fornigation, which j is that com- 
TP vat eal a He as 
6. That committed between 
hat .cqmmitted by 
And, 8, That com- 
ried per oo aa a 
evsnfecrated to God, fucrilege. 
erfons of the fare {ex , fodomy fe. 
erfons on themfelves, maz ufeup! ‘ation. 
mitted with bealts, beftial, 
FORNIX, in 4 eas a medullary body contained in 
— 
the lateral ventricles of the brain, See Brain. 
 FORN ae in oe a town of Italy, in 
Venetia, N. E. qui 
FOROMAN, a aa "Cf the zee of Sumatra, near 
the weft coaft ; 10 miles S. of Achee 
FORONOVO, a town oa in the duchy of Parma; 
8 miles W. S. W. of Parma 
FORPRISE, in Law, anexception, or refervation ; in 
which fenfe the word is ufed in the flatute of Exon. 14 
Edw 
We ftill afe it in conveyances and leafes, wherein excepted 
_ . 
and forprifed are fynonymouns ter 
Forpriss is alfo ufed for an os $ in which fenfe it 
vig to the fame with foreeapiu 
‘l'otum pratum, &c. fine auaeuiane forprifa ia ex- 
ou. pro placca dedit. 
FOR VERAG, Aad: and Joun Barrisr 
Antuony, in Biography, father and fon, both French mu- 
ficians, who were patronized by Louis XIV. during their 
infancy. peer the eldeft, was born at ean in 1671; 
his fa ther, rofe flor o ve him leffons in 
ofited (ae, Ga at five 
years ‘ol laye ed many times to the king, who ufed to 
call him. bis “petit. prodige.”? At 20, the young For- 
querag, was the beft performer on the violin of his time ; he 
had allo a genius for compofition, and pr 
ce harmonious and ‘melodi ous. ‘His talents, and ftill 
uced him into the 
regent duke. for 
his mafter in mu de and eouiiaceh honoured him with _ 
' patronage. This mufician died at-Mantes in 1745, a 
left a fon born in 1700. This was. John Baptitt Ee 
Vou. XV. 
fod rum 
oduced. pieces 
FOR 
Che 
the wile court by the prodigious oo which he had 
acquired at fo tender an age. nce of Conti had a 
in ffedtion for this mufician, and ee him in his 
ervice. On the death of that pring ces Forquerag quitted 
the profeffion, and fivifhed his days in cone in the 
is. family, by whom he was much beloved and 
refpected. Madam Forquerag, his a peer on the 
harpfichord, and till 1780 played with fo much grace and 
facility, that fhe may be regarded “at the head of female 
dilettanti. Laborde. 
FORRAGE, or Foracs, = for cattle, of hay ; 
oats, ae ftraw 5 particularly in v 
Skinner derives the word from oor agere, by reafon 
they ¢o aed to feek forrage ; others from far, which an- 
ciently fignified any kind of corn or grain. Menage, from 
ich the Romans ufed 
Ca derive it froin the 
Guat from the Getman 
foden eden, m farrago, which | 
literally “ti Mirae era we: aa forage and figuratively, a 
mixture ae divers kinds of thin Hicks derives it from 
the Saxoa fodra, or the Englifn fodder 3 or the bafe Latin 
pss ee Fopper 
erm relates to the acquifition and diftribution of 
fuch ‘fupplies as are rte aoe -necefia ary for the fubfitt- 
ance of troops, or for the formation or pueda of any 
poft or ftation ; ie for ie mof{t part arbitrary 
mand, fuch as we underftand by the seGealy dclicate 
term ‘¢ requifition” ufed by the French, but a ch is in 
effe& only a contributory fpecies of pillage « 2 it is to be fup- 
pofed that foraging takes place chiefly in a 
try. Such is, indeed, the cafe 
dient to ftrengthen the covering parties fent out with 
foragers, fo far as may be fafely done without weakening 
the main — or Ses ka aia boy tigue. 
The.c orm a ver t feature 
— ; make trooper being Vepnithed with.a fac 
lie conveniently over the {faddle-bows, and another 
over the loins of “his fteed, on the cloak-pad, or eventually 
to ftand upright on ned to se by ® means . : - a 
paffing round his o -What ns m 
tier is shed nnecellny that no 0 faltenings Roald ‘be 
t fuc be undone n inftan 
on all fo. 
When tro detached ont 
eminences, fteeples precau- 
tion. In the mean while the feveral igen collect the 
feveral ails they may find, or fland of ; taking 
care to pack them into the faite compals, ae feeuring 
every _ with proper ban age 
nas ana eins 18 aler ae troops muft concentrate, 
in fire manner as m een previoufly direGted, but 
without lofing oe ‘of che object of their miffion. Her 
arifes a very delicate and critical cafe; for, on the Pe 
met of the fuperior- a all will depend. Ifa rac 
