r ' . 
'across, seasoned, 
. carbonado. 
i of thy arms into car- 
are, Tamburlaine the Great, I., iv. 4. 
i* ay] willingly, let him make a carbo- 
Shak., 1 Hen. IV., v. 3. 
/ Broil them on the coals 
jonadoes. 
Massinfrer, The Bondman, iii. 3. 
:bonado-t (kar-bo-nad',-na'd6), 
jade, ti.} 1. To make a carbo- 
/ across and grill. 
/ Will he have a brace, 
le partridge, or a short legg'd hen, 
carbonadoed ? 
her {and another). Love's Pilgrimage, i. 1. 
hack, as in fighting. 
;ue, or I'll so carbonado your shanks. 
Shale., Lear, ii. 2. 
With his keen-edged spear 
,t and carbonaded them. 
Matsinger, Picture, ii. 1. 
jrmise a man ever could rise 
pus carbonado'd, cut up, and dissected ? 
Barham, Ingoldsby Legends, I. 230. 
j-na'do), n. [Sp., < carbono, 
] Same as bort, 2. 
na'do), n. and v. Same as 
of Carbonaro. 
na'rizm), n. [< Carbonari 
iles, deeds, or cause of the 
with or support of them, 
self-forgetfulness, the audacity 
1 with whose conspiracies the 
merely child's play, are a fact so 
it we can hardly understand it. 
|r. of Lavelaye's Socialism, p. 196. 
, n. ; pi. Carbonari 
, a charcoal-burn- 
oal-bumer, a col- 
0, coal, charcoal: 
bers of a secret 
irbonari, formed 
& ' rei-n of 
Tl 
cu 
fe 
wi 
Sp. 1 
ing to caiuv. 
acid, CO 2 , more 
carbon dioxid, a g. 
of carbon and 32 o 
times as heavy as hy 
to the extent of 1 
liquid by high press 
solid white substance 
duced by the sudden 
lowed to escape from ; 
lous, pungent taste, an 
beer, champagne, and > 
owe their refreshing qua : 
poisonous when taken int 
taken into the stomach in 
in water, it forms a dibasi 
carbonates, are widely an 
ture. It is incapable of mi 
life, acting as a narcotic p 
the extent of only 4 or 5 p 
fermenting liquors and fi 
animal substances, an*' 
the earth, constituting 
weight it has a tender 
and wells, rendering 
valley of Java, and 
is formed and giver 
and in all ordinary 
bon in the fuel. I 
flowers of plants 1 
parts of plants du 
light, plants absor 
through their lea\ 
carbon, and returnu. 
bonic-acid engine. 
is ejected by the prt 
evolved in a chambe 
(6) An engine which 
condensed carbonic r 
'"* <mters, undt 
-*oce (CO) 
d-hot.fr 
PE 
1625 
C4 
I889a 
pt.3 
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