autometric 390 autostylic 
autometric (a-to-met'rik), a. Of or pertaining and immutable: opposed to heteronomy (which compauied with loss of substance are repaired 
to autometry. see). by means of healthy portions of tissue taken 
autometry (a-tom'e-tri), . [< Gr. i>r<}f, self, antonym (a'to-nim), . [< Gr. airdf, self, + from another part of the patient, and made to 
+ -fierpia, < /icTfiov, measure.] Self-measure- ovofia, dial, uvv/ia, name.] 1. One's own name; a supply the deficiency. See rhinoplasty. 
ment; self-estimation. X. E. D. real name: opposed to pseudonym and anonym, autopolygraph (a-td-pol'i-graf), n. [<Gr. amot;, 
automobile (a-to-mo'bil), a. [<Gr. avrAc,, self, 2. That which bears one's own name, as a self, + polyyrai>h.] An autographic printing 
-I- L. mobilis, mobile.] Self -moving. book published under the author's real name, process. E. H. Knight. 
A,, auto-mobil,' car, with isolated rails. 3. The self-same name; one and the same autopsiat (a-top'si-a), H. [NL., < Gr. avro^ia, a 
Greer, Diet, of Elect., p. 48. name for two or more things; a homonym, seeing with one s own eyes, < auronrof, seen by 
Our authorities are still in the dark as to what can ac- [Rare.] one's self, < avrof, self, + OTrrof, seen (cf. oijitf, 
tually be done with automobile torpedoes. autopathic (a-to-path'ik), a. [< autopa thy + sight) : see optic.'] Same as autopsy, 1. 
12S - -ic.] In pathol, dependent on the original It is no small undertaking for a man ... to begin a 
automolite (a-tom'o-llt), >/. [< Gr. ai)ro/;o/lpf, a structure and developmental tendencies of the natural history from his own autopsia. Gilbert White. 
deserter, prop, adj., 'going of one's self (<ai>rdf, individual; endopathic, as opposed to exopath- autopsic (a-top'sik), a. [< autopsia + -ic.] 
self, + [toteiv, go, or come), + -ite 2 .] A name i c: applied to certain forms of disease. 1. Same as autoptic. 2. In med., pertaining 
sometimes given to gahiiite, from the fact that it i s impossible, says Simon, absolutely to exclude au- to or obtained by means of an autopsy, 
it contains a large proportion of zinc oxid, topathic diseased states ; there may be some such, mostly 
T voaomVilnnpp to an nro SPB developmental, which "are actual caprices and snc.ntanei- Undoubtedly the late King of Bavaria was insane, and 
/ /,-*? ties of > ife . without * exterior CMMtion whatsoever." the autoptic and the combined ante-mortem testimony to 
gaknite. Also spelled automatm. _ ^ Enci/c. Brit., XVIII. 362. his insanity was not more confirmatory of mental de- 
automorphic (a-to-mor'fik), . [< Gr. avTOftop- an tnnat'hv CA-ton'a-thil IX Gr avToiradeia rangement than that given in the history of Guiteau. 
0o f , self-formed, natural (taken as 'formed upon B 2?*HJ* Yeel&e or experience <al7oS AKm ' and Nmml " V "' 538 ' 
one's own self or pattern'), < air<fc, self, + uop- one 1 - Own ng , or ex P eri . enoe > J vrmraffK, Autopmc notes of cases of cellulitis. 
Tform.] S Frame P dor conceived after Ihe al |^Mf > + SZi SSteriS]"^ * ,/*T ' ""*" "' ^ 
tern or form of one's self. taaHffieitTf^ 8 ^^^^ autopsical (a-top'si-kal), a, Same as autopsic. 
The conception which any one frames of another's mind gideration. I>r, H. More. See extract. Basing his opinion on the autopsical examination of 
is inevitably more or less after the pattern of his own fever patients. 
mind -Is automorphic; and in proportion as the mind of ,. We . m j. ne * V W* ** the Zirm^en, Cyc. of Med. (trans.), Supp., p. 561. 
nhi.-h Via liao tn frnmo a cniicpntinn Hiffprs from hfa nu-n altruistic Sentiments US Subjective feellllgS. >O COITC- . .. .. , 
Sb^^totoS^ffl?^^^^^ sponding term exists for thi egoistic s f S,nents. The autopsically (a-top's.-kal-i), adv. Same as 
t ru th // Suriirrr Study of Sociol p 114 word autopathy, could it be adopted m this sense, would autoptically. 
automorphically (a-to-mo'r'fl-kal-i), *.' In dOUbtle88be ' Undl TAFr d Dynam. Sociol II 371 autopsy (a'top-si), [< autopsia, q. v.] 1. 
an automorphic manner. H. Spencer. AutODhari (a-tof'a-ii) n pTwL pi of an- A ??emg for one's self ; personal ocular obser- 
SSS^fSsS o^'s'^n ^^^dln| ^^fet.f In aWife < tffS?8fiUjfSi 
st^r-L 5? ^ ha e fitp s^^^jpsaSiss ain o rl de sft d e b a o n d d y sctfc 
a%sud^u% ^v, s ^^r. ed: - - ^^^^^^^ 
a|^f (Vto-nom'ik), a. [As auton^ous 'fS^^^^^S^ '^^t1S^iSff' let 
^^ sS^ssrJS! Ei^^ 9 + SSSA^L * ; ^^^^^?^S 
5 kjcjj.-u.cvunj.iiig. A-. tocjj. j.ccuj.iig , i ,1 M nit ui aiitnnv nr nprsjniinl nTprvfltir>Ti n /TM//">/JV 
governing; mofependent. feeding itself, as a precocial bird: equivalent *"Se AKo written ^ow?c 
i> n nn j k.. ... ..#.,.. .,,;.. (t n ... i... i_ __1: A; /i . . i_ : \ i_ i *i. _ twfww? 
or self-government of the community to which 
_^ toptic manner; by ocular view or one's own 
he belongs, or of any community. autophoby (a'to-fo-bi), n. [< Gr. airiif, self, -I- observation. Also written autojmcally. 
The party of the Irreconcilables [in Alsace-Lorraine] -tpopia, fear: see -phobia.'} Fear of referring to That the galaxy is a meteor, was the account of Arts- 
had been gradually giving way to the Autonomists, or one's self ; fear of being egotistical. Hare, totle ; but the telescope hath autoptically confuted it. 
those who subordinated the question of nationality to that rR are 1 Glanville, Seep. Sci., p. 174. 
of home rule. Lo m , Bismarck, II. 385. a L utopnon (rt o-fon), n. [< Gr. avr^of, self- autort. . An obsolete form of author. 
autonomous (a-ton o-mus), n. [< Gr. avrdvofwf, sounding, < aiVrff. self, + <t>uvf/, voice, sound.] autorialt, a. An obsolete form of authorial. 
independent, of one's own free will, < BWttf. A form of barrel-organ, of which the tunes are autorityt, . An obsolete form of authority. 
self, -r vtftetv, hold sway, > v6pO(, law : see nome. ] determined by perforations in a sheet of mill- autoschediasm (a - to - ske ' di - azm), n. [< Gr. 
1. Of or pertaining to autonomy or an auton- board cut to correspond with the desired notes. airoo-^t&aoyHz, work 'done offhand (cf. avTooxe- 
omy. 2. Independent in government; having E. H. Knight. fiaa/t6f, extemporaneous speaking), < avroaxe- 
the right of self-government. autophony (a-tof'o-ni), w. [< NL. autophonia didfriv: see autoscliediaze.'] An offhand act or 
The few brave men who seven years back first un- (in form as if < Gr. avroijxjvia, the voice itself), performance ; something nastily improvised, 
sheathed their yataghans amid the hills of Herzegovina < Q r _ avruAuvtK, self -sounding : see autouhon.~\ autoschediastic (a"t6-ske-di-as'tik), a. [< Gr. 
prov n inceTKterS,meHa em e for an auto "< m ' In auscultation, the character of the sound of avroaxediao*, offhand, extemporaneous, < 
E. A. Freeman, Amer. Lects., p. 445. the auscultators own voice when his head is aiiroo-^eoWrfc, one who acts or speaks offhand, 
3. Subject to its own laws ; specifically, in biol., P, laced against the chest of the patient. When < mnoxtM(ea>, do, act, or speak offhand: see 
independent of any other organism; not a form there is a large cavity this sound may be ren- autosehediaze.] Slight; hasty; not fully con- 
or stage of development of some other organ- Jered of greater intensity than is normal. sidered; done hastily or on the spur of the 
ism. autophthalmoscope (a - tof - thai ' mo - skop), H . moment. 
autonomously (a-ton'6-mus-li), adv. In an au- [< Gr - airr6 t> 8el f + ophthalmoscope^] An in- autoschediastical (a'to-ske-di-as'ti-kal), a. 
tonomous manner ; from one's own choice. strument by which one may inspect the interior Same as autoschediastic. Dean Martin. 
we must know and a,,to,ic, / win t fniinw of one ' s own e y es - autoschediaze (a-to-ske'di-az), v. i.; pret. and 
egotatlc I ataomte ?& ^Te^enS^L^. autophyllogeny (ato-fi-loj'e-ni), n. [< Gr. oi- pp. autoschediazed, ppr. autoscTiediazing. [< Gr. 
<?. S. Ball, German Culture, p. 183. T<if, self, + 0i'/./W, leaf, + -ykveia, production : avroaxeotafeiv, do, act, or speak offhand, < 
autonomy (a-ton'6-mi), .; pi. autonomies see -ff cn y-] A term proposed by Morren for avrooxeitof. offhand, < auric,, self, + axeoiof, 
(-miz). [< Gr. avrovo'ftia, independence, < aiirovo- the abnormal growth of leaves from leaves. near, sudden, offhand: see schediastic.] To 
fwf, independent: see autonomous.] 1 The autopisty (a'to-pis-ti), n. [< Gr. aMfttTOf, improvise or extemporize. 
power or right of self-government, whether in credible in itself, < airof, self, + JTHTTOC, credi- autoscope (a'to-skop), n. [< Gr. aiirof, self, + 
a community which elects its own magistrates We i worthy of belief, < xeiBeiv, irtSelv, persuade.] anoirelv, view.] An instrument invented by 
and makes its own laws, or in an individual Worthiness of belief from internal evidence; Coccius for the self-examination of the eye. 
who acts according to his own will the quality of credibility existing in a state- Syd. Soc. Lex. 
There was nothing in the treaty of Adrianople that ent itself, independently of external evidence autOSCOpy (a-tos'ko-pi), n. [< Gr. air6f self, 
really interfered with the autonomy ot the Circassians. or corroboration. [Rare.] + -moma, < ancmew, view.] In med., the ex- 
Latham, Nationalities of Europe, I. xxxii. autoplast (a'to-plast), w. [< Gr. aiiriSnvlaoTOf, animation of one's self, as by the autoscope or 
That which is autonomy objectively will l>e self-deter- self-formed, < avrAf, self, + irAaanf, verbal adj. the autolaryngoscope. 
mination subjectively. Maudsley, Body and Will, p. 189. of KAaaaeiv, form.] In embryol., an autogenous autositarius(a"to-si-ta'ri-us), w. ; pi. autositarii 
2. A self-governing community. 3. An au- ce U> that is, a cell which appears to take form (-1). [NL., as autosite, q. v., + -anus.] In 
tonomous condition; the condition of being spontaneously in the yolk of an ovum, not by teratol., either part of a double monster which 
subject only to its own laws ; especially, in biol., fission or the regular process of cleavage of the is formed by the junction of two equally de- 
organic independence. vitellus. See extract. veloped individuals, as by means of the umbili- 
The government of the Arabs may be called almost an In ad(lition to the layer of cleavage cells which consists CUB. 
autonomy. Ji. F. Burton El-Medinah p 341 of more than one stratum of cells in the future embryonic autosite (a'to-slt), n. [< Gr. aiiTuaiTof, bringing 
Giventhebasisofgoodmentalnutritionandrespiration 3 Ke mats ^^d^^SS^^!. one's own provisions, < airof, self ,+ olro, food ] 
in a suitable socia atmosphere, and there take place from dependent process of segregation, each cell having a sena- teratol., that twin m an unequal double 
/ZL,, tl f n ;f, spo ' '^i'.' 60118 variations test ifying to the a,,- rat e origin, whence they ai-e termed autoplast,,. monster which furnishes nutriment to the 
tonony of the organism. Maudtky, Bodyand Will, p. 147. E . R. Laniceater , Encye. Brit., XVI. 682. other, the latter being called the parasite or 
4. In the phtlos. of Kant, the doctrine that the autoplastic (a-to-plas'tik), a. Pertaining to parasitic twin. 
moral law is one which reason imposes upon autoplasty. autostylic (a-to-sti'lik), a. [< Gr. airoanAoc,, 
itself a priori, that is, independently of sense autoplasty (a'to-plas-ti), . [As autoplast + resting on natural columns, < atrdr, self, + 
and sense-experience, and is therefore absolute -y.] In surg., an operation by which lesions ac- bri/of, column: see *fyte 2 .] In anat., having 
