haustellum 
2739 
Haustella present many modifications; the proboscis of hautboyist (ho'boi-ist), n. 
the house-fiy, the sting of the mosquito, and the snout^of g ame as oboixt. 
[< hautboy + -ist.] tirely replacing any essential ingredient of the 
rock. The lava most commonly designated by the name 
LIIC iiuusc-n v, i(ii G ovuig r/ vuv **<*- - nil'll l< <i^ ""'"' i II i, it* -\/i * \r, 1 1 ,, * 
the bedbug are familiar examples. The most highly de- , , * hardp (hot'de-bard) n. TF.! Inhorse- hauynophyre is a nepheline-basalt from ilonte Vultu 
veloned luVustellum is the antliaof lepidopterous insects, & aute - a ??;?A, . 'X' ' 1 >t,' , Melft near Naples. The phouolitic lavas of the Elfel are 
veloped haustellum is the antliaof lepidopteroi 
as butterflies and moths, where it becomes a very long, 
spirally coiled, tubular organ or spirignath. The sucto- 
rial or siphonostomous crustaceans present another mod- 
ification of mouth-parts to the same end. Also haustel- ^'burs or leg-shields of the saddle. 
hStorium ( has,t6'ri-urn V ,; ^. haustoria hauteint, hautamt, a. [ME, also.; f ^, 
Jlelfi near" Naples. The phouolitic lavas of the Eifel are 
a , so remal . kab f e for the amount of haiiyne and other re- 
a t ea minerals which they contain. 
(-a). [NL., < L. haustor, a drawer, < haurirc, 
pp. haustus, draw : see 
haustf.] 1. One of the 
small roots or suckers of 
parasitic plants, which at- 
tach themselves to and 
penetrate the host plant, 
and establish a direct con- portion of the Mycelium of 
nectlOn With itS Sap, UpOn Grape-mildew (Peronospora 
which the parasite wholly ^f^'fT?, t& 
Or partly Subsists. 2. which have penetrated into 
pi. In fungi, specialized JSfied."1 Aft t er S Far'S.v. 1 j ma 
branches or organs of 
mycelia, serving either as a means of attach- 
ment or to bring the fungus into organic con- 
nection with its host. 
hausturet (has'tur), n. [< L. as if "haustura, 
< haurire, pp. haustus, draw: see hausft.} A 
draught. 
armor, a poitrinal made large and surrounding 
the fore part of the horse's body, having wings _ 
which protect the legs of the rider and replace Havana (ha -van' a), n. [Short for Havana 
cigar: Havana, formerly written in E. books 
Havannah, Sp. Habana (formerly spelled Ha- 
vana), the capital of Cuba. Its full name is 
San Cristobal de la Habana, i. e., St. Christopher 
of the Haven (ML. havana, accom. of Teut. 
haven): see haven.'] A kind of cigar: so called 
from Havana, the capital of Cuba, where cigars 
are extensively manufactured. 
Havana cigars are such only as are made in the island ; 
and the cigars made in Europe and elsewhere from genu- 
ine Cuban tobacco are classed as Havana*. 
Encye. Brit., XXIII. 426. 
Havana brown. See brown. 
havance, n. [< have + -ance. Cf. havior, be- 
havior.] Behavior; good behavior; manners. 
Grose. [Prov. Eng.] 
Havanese (hav-a-nes' or -nez'), a. and n. [< 
Havana + -ese: see Havana.} I. a. Of or be- 
longing to the city of Havana in Cuba. 
II. n. sing, and pi. A native or an inhabitant 
of Havana ; the people of Havana. 
hawtayne, howteyne, etc., < OF. hautein, hau- 
tain, high, etc.: see hauty, haughty."] 1. High; 
lofty; of lofty flight. 
Ne gentil hawteyn faukone heroneer. 
Chaucer, Good Women, 1. 1120. 
2. High of voice ; loud. 
Prestly than putte him out in peril of dethe, 
Bi-fore tho herty houndes hauteyn of cryes. 
William of Palerne (E. E. T. S.), 1. 2187. 
In chirches whan I preche, 
I peyne me to han an hauteyn speche, 
And ringe it outi as round as goth a bell. 
Chaucer, Prol. to Pardoner's Tale, 1. 44. 
3. Haughty; proud. 
I was so hawtayne of herte, whilles I at home lengede, 
I helde nane my hippe heghte, undire hevene ryche. 
Morte Arthure (E. E. T. S.), 1. 2613. 
The erle's sonues wer hauteyn, did many folie dede. 
Robert of Brunne, p. 219. 
Some tyme detraccioun makith an hawteyn man be the 
more humble. 
. D _.. Chaucer, Parson's Tale. jj ave (hav), v.; pret. and pp. had, ppr. having; 
It is just matter of lamentation when souls . . . fall to hauteinlyt, hautainlyt, adv. [ME., < hautein ind. pres. 1 have, 2 hast, 3 has, pi. have. [Also 
* " " 1. In a high or shrill voice; loudly; dial, contr. ha, ha', Sc. hae; < ME. haven, inf. 
prop, habben (pres. ind. 1 have, habbe, 2 havest, 
hafest, hast, has, 3 haveth, hafeth, hath, also 
haves, habbes, has, pi. haveth, habbeth, hare, han ; 
pret. hadde, hafde, havede, etc., pp. had, haved, 
heved, i-haved, i-heved), < AS. habban (pres. ind. 
1 luebbe, also (ONorth.) hafa, hafo, hafu, 2 haf- 
such apostacy as with Demas to embrace the dunghill of 
this world, and with an hausture to lick up the mud of 
corruption. Rev. T. Adams, Works, II. 199. 
haustus (has'tus), n. ; pi. haustus. [L., a 
draught: see liausft."] 1. In med., a draught; 
a potion. 2. In civil law, the right of drawing 
water, and of access to the place of drawing. 
+ -?y2.] 
shrilly. 
When better remembred hys diffaute, lo ! 
With shill voce cried that time hautaynly, 
"Alas, caitife !" saide, "don haste folily." 
Rom. of Partenay (E. E. T. S.), 1. 3317 
2. Proudly; haughtily. 
VTevuv*) uiuu v- mvviw v*. -^^ ^-,~ ..___. _ ^ , ,-, v ^ j^ /((^yyp OiloU V \S* Ul Uli. ) **/**) ""./ J ""at W 
hautH (hat), a. [Early mod. E. also hault (with haute-lisse (hot-les ),a. [P., high warp,<ftate, agf ; ., 3 ha f at ], h(efth, pret. luefde, rarely 
silent I), and still more erroneously haught fern, of haut, high, + lisse, warp: see haut 1 and .>. '-- '.~a - ...,...** ,.^.^ 
(q. v. ) ; < ME. *haut, < OF. haut, halt, later hault, lisse, and cf . basse-lisse.} In tapestry-weaving, 
prop, and orig. without the aspirate, alt, F. wrought with the warp in a perpendicular posi- 
haut, = Sp. Pg. It. alto, high, < L. altus, high, tion: distinguished from basse-lisse. 
deep, lit. grown, increased (= Gothic alths = hautepacet, n. [Also written halpace, appar. 
OHG. MHG. G. alt = AS. eald, E. old, q. v.), accom. to hall; < OF. haut, high, + pas, a step, 
(later)";o;(7de, pi. hasfdon, pp. geha-fd, h(efed) 
= OS. hebbian = OFries. hebba, habba = D. heb- 
ben = MLG. hebben = OHG. haben, MHG. G. 
habeit = Icel. hafa = Sw. hafva = Dan. have = 
Goth, haban (pret. habaida, stem habai-), have, 
hold; Teut. stem "habai- = L. habe-re ( > It. mere 
= Pg. haver = Sp. haber = Pr. aver = F. avoir), 
have. The remarkable agreement of the Teut. 
and L. forms in respect to their consonants, 
which throws doubt upon their etymological 
identity, is explained by referring them to a 
common root "khabh (cf. L. hie, this, he, of com- 
mon origin with E. he 1 , here 1 , etc.). The L. ca- 
pere, sometimes equated with E. have, is rather 
= E. heave (see capable and heave). Hence, in 
comp., behave, etc., and, from the L. habere, E. 
habit, etc.] I. trans. 1. To hold, own, or pos- 
sess as an appurtenance, property, attribute, 
or quality ; hold in possession : as, to have and 
to hold. 
The folk of that Contree han a dyvers Lawe. 
Mandeville, Travels, p. 164. 
Unto every one that hath shall be given, and he shall 
have abundance. Mat. xxv. 29. 
I M. take thee N. to my wedded wife, to have and to 
hold from this day forward. 
Boo* of Common Prayer, Solemnization of Matrimony. 
2. To hold by accepting, receiving, obtaining, 
gaining, or acquiring in any way; become pos- 
sessed of or endowed with; be in receipt of; 
get: as, he 7ms high wages; they have had ten 
children. 
By his first [wife] had he Suane. Robert of Brunne. 
Zee schulle undirstonde that cure Lady hadde Child 
whan sche was 15 Zeere old. Mandemlle, Travels, p. 113. 
Wilt thou have me [as a husband] 1 Shale., Hen. V., v. 2. 
I shall but languish for the want of that, 
The hating which would kill me. 
Beau, and Fl., King and No King, ill. 1. 
If these trifles were rated only by art and artfulness, we 
should have them much cheaper. Collier. 
'Tis only God may be had for the asking. 
Lowell, Sir Lannfal. 
3. To contain or comprise as an adjunct or 
~ -^ i"ft** v~^ .v j, . , .. , j component part : as, the work has an index; his 
high, + bois, wood: see haut 1 and Epi i epsy . wit L* a spice of malice. 
. 1. A wind-instrument of wood, sound- Hautvillers(F.pron.6-ve-lya'), n. Awinepro- 
ed through a double reed: in recent use more <juced a t Hautvillers in Champagne, France: 
one of the best of the still Champagne wines, 
hautyt, a - The earlier form of haughty. 
(ha'win), n. [< Hauy (the French ruin- 
It. J. Hauy, 1743-4822) + -*ne2.] A 
sually occurring in rounded crystal- 
s, rarely in distinct isometric crystals. 
Its co'lor is blue of various shades. It is found embedded 
orig. pp. of alere, nourish: see alt, alto', alti- pace.] A raised floor in a bay-window. Hall 
tuSe. aliment, all.'} 1. High; lofty; elevated. Hen. VIII., f. 65. (Halliwell.) 
2. High in sound; shrill. Bailey. 3. Proud; haute-piece (hot'pes), n. [F. /MTOte-pto, nigh 
haughty. piece,< haute, fern, of haut, high, + piece, piece.] 
She began to look very hault and stout, having all man- In armor, the large beaver, mentonnitee, or buff 
ner of jewels or rich apparel that might be gotten with that is, any face-protector fixed to the breast- 
money. Bauees Book (E. E. T. S.), p. x., note. plate or gorget. 
hautesset, n. [ME., also hawtesse, < OF. hau- 
tesse, autesse, altesse, highness; < haut, high: 
see haut 1 , haught.} Haughtiness. 
Morgne the goddes, 
Therfore hit is hir name ; 
Weldez non so hyje hawtesse, 
That ho ne con make ful tame. 
Sir Gawayne and the Green Knight (E. E. T. S.), 1. 2454. 
hauteur (ho-ter'), n. [F., < haut, high, proud, 
haughty: see haut 1 , haught.} Haughty feeling 
or bearing; arrogant manner or spirit. 
The ill-judging zeal and hauteur of this king. 
Bp. Ellys, On Temporal Liberty (1765), p. 185. 
In his several addresses recently delivered in America, 
we note most suggestive examples of this parade of parts, 
this literary hauteur. New Princeton Rev., V. 361. 
Stanihurst, JSneid.1. 193. haut-gOUt (to-gO'), . [Formerly also hault- 
gust, hogoe ; < F. haut gout: haut, high; gout, 
taste, relish : see haut 1 and gouft, gust*.} Any- 
thing with a strong relish or a strong scent ; high 
Thy father was as brave a Spaniard 
As ever spake the haut Castilian tongue. 
Middleton, Spanish Gypsy, ii. 2. 
O Lord, I hinder my vocation and other men's through 
my self-wilfulness and the haut proud stoutness of my 
wretched sinful heart. 
J. Bradford, Works (Parker Soc., 1853), II. 260. 
A vine from Egypt thou hast brought, 
Thy free love made it thine ; 
And drov'st out nations, proud and haut, 
To plant this lovely vine. Milton, Ps. Ixxx., 1. 35. 
haut ! t (hat), v. t. [< ME. hauten; < haut 1 , a.} 
To make high ; raise ; exalt ; elevate. 
He daunted the proude, & hawted the poure. 
Arthur (ed. Furnivall), 1. 113. 
Chiefe stays vpbearing croches high from the antlier 
hauled 
On trees stronglye fraying. 
haut 2 (hat), n. [< Hind, hat, late Skt. hatta, a 
market, a fair.] In Bengal, a market. 
haut 3 (hat), n. [< Hind, hath, the forearm, the 
hand.] In Bengal, a measure of length equal 
to the distance from the elbow to the tip of the 
middle finger ; a cubit. 
hautaint, hautainlyt. See hautein, hauteinly. 
hautboy (ho'boi), n. [A partly restored form, 
after the F. hautbois, which is also sometimes 
used in E., of the earlier hoboy, hoeboy, hobois, 
rarely hawboy (= It. oboe, a form now used in 
flavor or seasoning. 
Sure I am, our palate-people are much pleased there- 
with [garlick], as giving a delicious hault-yust to most 
meats they eat, as tasted and smelt in their sauce, though 
not seen therein. Fuller, Worthies, Cornwall. 
To give the Sawce a hogoe, let the dish ... be rubed 
with it [garlick]. 
/. Walton, Complete Angler (ed. 1653), p. 159. 
The French by soups and haut-gouts glory raise, 
And their desires all terminate in praise. 
W. King, Art of Cookery. 
E.), < OF. hautbois, hanltbois, F. hautbois, a 
hautboy, lit. 'high wood' (referring, in the case h au t ma l (ho mal). [F., great disease: haut, 
high notes), j^g^ ( gee haut 1 ); mal, < L. malum, disease.] 
of the musical instrument, to its 
< haut, 
commonly in the Italian form oboe. 
Marrying all their [Israelites') voices 
To Timbrels Hawboys, and loud Cornets noises. 
Sylvester, tr. of Du Bartas's Weeks, ii., The Lawe. 
Then put they on him a white Turbant ; and so, return- 
ing with drums and hoboys, is with great solemnity con- 
ducted to the Mosque. Sandys, Travailes, p. 44. 
A boxen hautboy, loud and sweet of sound, 
^^^Sve WithbraZen |St^als,vi. 1~ *' With ^ dUm SUlphate - 
2. In bot., a kind of strawberry, Fragaria ela- haiiynophyre (ha-win'o-fir), n. [< hauyne_ 
tior, growing in Europe at moderate altitudes. Gr. (7rop)c4i'pfof, purple : see porphyry.] 
j _u L i ti. c....:. \, nn r_i i ; 1 ; 
Every humour hath his adjunct pleasure. 
Shak., Sonnets, xci. 
Thin mane, thick tail, broad buttock, tender hide, 
Look, what a horse should have he did not lack. 
Shak., Venus and Adonis, 1. 299. 
The earth hath bubbles, as the water has, 
And these are of them. Shak., Macbeth, i. 3. 
4. To hold for use or disposal, actually or po- 
tentially ; hold the control over or right to : as, 
Its color is blue of 'various sliailes. it. is lonna emuei *j ~ -- -- - , " t v n j__i 
in volcanic rocks, basalt, phonolite, etc., and is a silicate to have the floor (in debate) ; to have the deal 
Also 
+ 
The 
(in card-playing) ; to have authority. 
Let me have men about me that are fat. Shale., J. C., i. 2 
They [the people of Brazil] entertaine and welcome 
Strangers at first with weeping and deepe sighes, pitying 
The 'leaves are rugose and plicate, and the fruit has a name given to various volcanic rocks in which their tedious iourney, and presently dry their eyes, hauing 
musky flavor. In France the term iMittbou is also ap- ., .^p,,.,! haiivne occurs in such auantitv as teares at command. Purchas, Pilgrimage, p. 835. 
plied to the elder, Sambucus nigra. Hautboy d'amour. 
See oboe d'amour, under oboe. 
the mineral haiiyne occurs in such quantity as 
to be conspicuous, although rarely, if ever, en- 
teares 
Obey them that have the rule over you. 
Heb. xiii. 17. 
