pageantry 
They dishonour nml maki 1 n pa'pantry of the sacrament. 
.l.r. Tuiilnr, Works (cd. \W.,\ II. 8IN1. 
The streetoH strew'd w'i> llowres, and full of ]*ii[fantry, 
banners, and bravery. h'rflitn. IM.-n-y, May 26, 1644. 
pageauntt, An obsolete form of pageant. 
page-cord (piij'kord), H. In printing, twine 
used to tie up pages of type so that they can 
be safely handli-il. 
pagehood (paj'hud),i. [< page" + -hood.} The 
state or condition of a page. 
sin hours herself like the very model of pagehood. 
Scott, Abbot, xlx. 
Pagellus (pft-jel'us), . [NL. (Cuvier), dim. of 
L. pai/rit.*, pi'iier. sea-bream: see Pagrus.'] A 
tfrnus of sparoid fishes with several rows of 
rounded molar teeth on the sides of the jaws, 
Mini long front teeth like canines. There are sev- 
eral European species : the common sea-bream of Europe 
Is /'. centrodonlui, the Billhead ; the Spanish sea-bream Is 
P. oweni. By Cuvier the genus was made to Include some 
tropical fishes now placed elsewhere. 
pagencyt, ii. [< pagen(t), pagean(t), + -cy.] A 
pageant, stage, or scaffold. Salliwell. 
pagentt, . An obsolete form of pageant and of 
pagine. 
pageryt(pa'jer-i), H. [< page* + -ry.] The em- 
ployments or the station of a page. 
These [stealing, etc.] are the arts, 
Or seven liberal deadly sciences, 
Of pagery, or rather paganism. 
B. Joruon, New Inn, i. I. 
Paget's disease. 1. Eczema about the nipple, 
terminating in carcinoma. 2. Arthritis and 
osteitis deformans. 
pagi. . Plural of pat/us. 
pagilt, n. See pagle. 
pagina (paj'i-nil), n. ; p\.paginee(-ne). [NL., < 
L. pagina, page: see page 1 , pagine.'} In bot., 
the surface, either upper or under, of any flat 
body, such as a leaf. 
paginal (paj'i-nal), a. [< ML. paginalis, epis- 
tolary, lit. of a page, < L. pagina, page: see 
pagei, pagine.] 1. Of or pertaining to pages; 
consisting of pages. 
An expression proper unto the paginal books of our 
times, but not so agreeable unto volumes or rolling books 
in use among the Jews. Sir T. Browne, Vulg. Err., v. 6. 
2. Page for page. 
A verbal and paginal reprint. 
1'iillenham, Arte of Eng. Poesie, Int., p. xv. 
paginate (paj'i-uat), v. t.; pret. and pp. pagi- 
nated, ppr. paginating. [< ML. paginates, pp. 
of paginare, page, also brief, abstract, epito- 
mize, < L. pagina, page: see page*-.] To num- 
ber or mark with consecutive numbers, as the 
pages of a manuscript, etc., in order to facilitate 
reference. 
It Is entitled "The View of France," and forms a small 
quarto, not paginated. JV. and ','. , 6th ser. , IX. 428. 
pagination (paj-i-na'shon), n. [< F. pagination 
= Sp. paginacion = Pg. , paginaytto, < ML. pagi- 
natio(n-), <. paginare, page, paginate: seepage 1 , 
paginate.] 1. The act of paging. 2. The fig- 
ures or marks on pages by which their order is 
indicated and reference to them facilitated. 
The recollections of these two players were so inaccurate 
that they at first totally omitted the Troilus and Cresslda, ' 
which is inserted without pagination. 
I. D'ltraeli, Amen, of Lit., II. 207. 
paginet, . [ME., also pagyne and pagent; < OF. 
pagine, < L. pagina, a leaf, a written page: see 
page^. Cf. pageant.] 1. A page. 
The philisopher fnl wyse was and sage 
Which declarid In hys first pagent. 
Rom. ofParteaay (E. E. T. 8.), 1. 79. 
2. A writing; Scripture. 
Perfeccioun of dyuyne pagyne. Ham-pole, Psalter, p. 4. 
paging (pa'jing), . [Verbal n. of page*, v.] 
Order of the pages of a book or writing, or the 
marks by which this order is indicated ; pagina- 
tion. 
paging-machine (pa'jiug-rna-shen'), w. A ma- 
chine analogous to a numbering-stamp, and op- 
erating upon the same principle, used for print- 
ing page-numbers in blank-books, numbering 
documents or tickets, and similar work. Com- 
pare numbcrinij-ftamii. 
paglet(pa'gl), " [Alsopaigle,pagil ; originob- 
scuro. Cf . pagglc. J The cowslip, Primula reris. 
Blue harebells, pagles, pansies, calaminth. 
B. Jonson, Pan's Anniversary. 
pagodt, . [Also pagodc ; now pagoda : see pa- 
i/o<la.] 1. Apagoda; hence, any Oriental tem- 
ple. 
They [in Pegu] have many Idol-houses, which they call 
'ii, M (In- tups whereof are covered with Leaf-gold. 
Y Clarkr. (leog. Desi-rip. (1671), p. S8. 
4231 
The presence seems, with things so richly odd, 
The mosque of Mahoitnd, or some queer pagod. 
Pope, Satires of Donne, iv. 289. 
2. An image of a deity; an idol. 
The hilt [of a "creeze"] of Wood, Horn, the better sort 
of Oold, Silvi r, cir Ivory, cut in the ngure of a deformed 
I'"-' -'. & Clarlre, Oeog. Descrlp. (171), p. 3. 
See thronging millions to the pagod run. 
And offer country, parent, wife, or son E 
Pope, EpU. to Satires, I. Ii7. 
pagoda (pa-go'dil), . [Formerly also pagoil. pn- 
ijnilr (seepagodj, pagathoe, etc.; < P. pagode = 
G.pagode, < Sp. pagoda = Pg. pagoda, pagode; 
< Pers. (> Hind.) butkadah, an idol-temple, a 
pagoda, < but, an idol, image, statue, + kailnli. 
temple. Cf. equiv. Hind, hut-klinim, < but, an 
idol, + l.liinni. a house. The Chinese name is 
peh-kuh-t'a or poh-kuh-t'a ('white bone tower'), 
pao-t'a ( ' precious pile or tower'), or simply fa, 
gile, tower.] 1 . In the far East, as India, China, 
urma, etc., a sacred tower, usually more or 
less pyramidal in outline, richly carved, paint- 
Great Pagoda, Tanjore. Southern India. (DrarMian style of 
architecture.) 
ed, or otherwise adorned, and of several stories, 
connected or not with a temple. Such towers 
were originally raised over relics of Buddha, the bones 
of a saint, etc., but arc now built chiefly as a work of 
merit on the part of some pious person, or for the purpose 
of improving the luck of the neighborhood. In China pa- 
godas are from three to thirteen stories high (always an 
odd number). See payod, 1. 
Near the pagoda, under a sacred canopy, hangs, within 
two feet of the ground, the Great Dagon bell. 
J. W. Palmer, Up and Down the Irrawaddi, p. 121. 
2f. An idol. 
In that klngdome [Pegu) they spend many of these Su- 
gar canes in making of houses and tents which they call 
Varely, for their idotes which they call Pagodfg. 
Hakhiyt't Voyages, II. 289. 
Many deformed Pagathoes are here [in Callecutj wor- 
shipped. S. Clarke, Geog. Descrip. (1671), p. 20. 
3. [Formerly also pagody ; so called with ref. 
to the figure of a 
pagoda on the 
coin. The natives 
in Madras called 
the coin Aim and 
rin-nliii (Telugu) 
or vardhan (Ta- 
mil).] A gold coin 
current in India 
from the six- 
teenth century. There were several varieties. Its 
value was approximately $1.70. Half- and quarter-pago- 
das were coined in silver. 
At the going out of Goa the hones pay custom?, two and 
forty pagodie* for euery horse, which pagody may be of 
sterling money slxe shillings eight pence, they be pieces 
of golde of that value. UaUuyt't Voyaget, II. 219. 
A portrait-painter, In the hope of picking up some of 
the pagodas which were then lightly got and aa lightly 
spent by the English in India [etc.]. 
Xacauiay, Warren Hastings. 
4. [cap.] [NL.] In zool., a genus of mollusks. 
Agajsiz, 1837. 
pagoda-sleevet (pa-go'da-slev), . Same as 
pagodc. 'J. 
pagoda-stone (pa-go'da-ston), H. A limestone 
found in China inclosing numerous fossil ortho- 
ceratites, whose septa when cut present a re- 
semblance to a pagoda. The Chinese believe that 
the fossils are engendered In the rock by the shadows of 
the pagodas that stand above them. 
pagoda-tree (pa-go'dii-tre), M. One of several 
trees so called in allusion to their form. That of 
Japan and China Is Sophora Japonica; that of India. /'/' 
cut Indica, also Plumeria actrti/oKu, a tree with fragrant 
Obrerse. Reverse. 
Pagoda, in the British Museum. (Size 
of the original.) 
Paguridae 
htowoms. naturalized from tropical America; that of the 
West Indies, I'lumrria alba (see nmcgay-trre}. - To shake 
the pagoda-tree, u> make a fortune in India: an expn- 
lon In frequent use In the latter part of the eighteenth 
tuiil the first part of the nineteenth century. 
The Nahob of a couple of generation* put, woo had 
enriched himself when the pagoda-tree was worth thr 
itiating. Saturday Rev., Sept. 3, 1881, p. S07. 
pagodet (pa-god'), . 1. Same as pagod. 2. 
A part of fashionable dress of the first half of 
the eighteenth century, apparently at first 
adopted by women and then by men who af- 
fected fashion. It consisted of an outer sleeve fnnnel- 
ihaped and turned hack, exposing the lining and an Inner 
sleeve of lawn or lace. Also pngoda-fleeve. 
pagodite (pa-go'dit), n. [< pagoda + -ite?.] A 
name given to the mineral which the Chinese 
carve into figures of pagodas, images of idols, 
and ornaments. It Is properly a variety of plnlte, 
though the name Is sometimes extended to Include a com- 
pact kind of pyrophylllte. Also called agalmalolite and 
flgure-ttone. 
pagodyt, n. See pagoda, 3. 
Pagomys (pag'o-mis), n. [NL., so named, ap- 
parently, because the common species of arctic 
seas, P. fcetidus, is sometimes called floe-rat; < 
Kinged Seal (I'afomft 
Gr. jrdj-of, frost (ice), + i"c, mouse.] A genus 
of Phocidx founded by J. K. Gray in 1864; the 
ringed seals. 
Pagonetta (pag-o-net'ft), n. [NL., < Gr. irfyor, 
frost (ice), + wyrra, duck: see Anag.] A genus 
of sea-ducks : same as Harclda. 
Pagophila fpa-gof'i-ia), . [NL., < Gr. miyof. 
frost, + fitof, loving.] A genus of Laridte 
named by Kaup in 1829 ; the ice-gulls or ivory- 
gulls : so called from the fondness of the birds 
for ice. There It but one species, P. eburnea. the adult 
of which Is pure-white all over, with black feet. 8ee cut 
under ivory-gull. 
pagri, . See puggree. 
Pagrina (pa-gri'nii), I' 1 - [NL., < Pagrus + 
-ilia 2 .] In Giinther's classification of fishes, the 
fourth group of the family Sparidx, typified by 
the genus Pagrus, having conical teeth in front 
and molars on the sides. The Pagrina are carniv- 
orous. There are several genera, of which the principal 
ore Sparus, Pagntt, and PageUut. By most authors called 
Spanme. 
pagrine (pa'grin), a. and n. I. a. Pertaining 
to the Pagrina, or having their characters; 
sparine. 
H. n. A member of the Pagrina; a sparine. 
Pagrus (pa'grus), n. [NL., < L. pagrus, pager. 
<Gr. ffdypof.saidtobe for j&ypos, the sea-bream.] 
The typical genus of Pagrina, having two rows 
of molar teeth on the sides of the upper jaw, 
and large canine teeth in front ; the sea-breams. 
It includes several species very closely related to the gut- 
heads or genus Kparvt, and by some referred to that ge- 
nus. P. mdgaru a common European species, Is known 
as the braize or bedtrr; it is red, and weighs five or six 
pounds. 
Paguma(pa-gu'mji), n. [NL. (J. E. Gray, 1864); 
a made word.] 1. A geuus of palm-cats or 
paradoxures of the family Virerrid and sub- 
family Paradoiurime, having a short sectorial 
tooth. Several species inhabit Asia and some of the ad- 
joining islands. The best-known Is the masked pagiune. 
P. larrata, of a grayish-brown color, with black feet and 
head, the latter marked with a white frontal streak and 
white rings around the eyes. P. leueomyttax inhabits Su- 
matra and Borneo. 
2. [/. <:] An animal of this genus; a pagume. 
pagume (pa'gum), . A member of the genus 
Paguma: same as palm-cat. 
pagurian (pa-gu'ri-an), a. and n. [< NL. Pa- 
gurtts + -ian.] I. a. Of or pertaining to the 
genus Pagurus in a broad sense. 
II. . A member of the genus Pagurus: a 
hermit-crab. 
Paguridae (pa-gu'ri-de), n.pl. [NL., < Pagurus 
+ -idee. Cf . Or. Ilajot'pi'&u, a humorous patro- 
nymieal name, with ref. to vdyovpos, a crab.] 
A family of anomurons decapod crustaceans, 
represented by the genus Pagurus, formerly 
coextensive with the Paguroidea, now restricted 
to aquatic hermit-crabs with short antenmiles. 
