TOG 
T 0 F 
margin of the tail, and the coverts of the wings, green.— 
Found in India. 
6 . Todus leucocephalus.—Black, the head subcristated; 
throat and upper part of the neck white: white-headed tody 
of Latham.—Found in America. 
7. Todus brachyrus.—Black, the vertex, neck, back, and 
short tail black: the short-tailed tody of Latham.—Found 
in America. 
8 . Todus plumbeus. — Above lead-coloured, hoary, be¬ 
neath milky; the crown, wing-feathers, and tail black: 
plumbeous tody of Latham.—Found in Surinam. 
9. Todus obscurus.—Above brown and black, underneath 
very sordid white, with pale throat: the dusky tody of Pen¬ 
nant and Latham.—Found in Rhode island. 
10. Todus regius.—Black and brown; the breast whitish, 
striated transversely with blackish; the throat and eye¬ 
brows white; the abdomen, rump, and tail red; the crest 
ferruginous at the apex, tipped with black: king tody of 
Latham.—Found in Cayenne. 
11. Todus paradiseus.—Crested head black; body white; 
tail wedge-formed; the intermediate tail-feathers very long: 
pied bird of paradise of Edwards, and paradise fly-catcher 
of Latham. It has the following varieties; viz., the tody 
with wings and tail pale-red; the tody underneath white, 
the breast from crerulescent to cinereous; and the Brasilian 
crested tody.—Found in Africa and the island of Mada¬ 
gascar. 
12. Todus ferruginous. — Ferruginous-black, underneath 
ferruginous; wing-feathers marked with a brown bar; 
cheeks spotted with black and white: the ferruginous-bellied 
tody of Latham.—Found in Cayenne. 
13. Todus novus, or gularis.—Brown, underneath white; 
throat white, and breast spotted with brown, above yellow: 
white-chinned tody of Latham. 
14. Todus platyrhynchos, or rostratus.—Brown-yellow¬ 
ish, beneath yellow, throat whitish; vertex lead-coloured, 
with a white spot upon it; wings and tail brown ; bill very 
broad : the broad-billed tody of Latham. 
15. Todus macrorhynchos, or nasutus.—Black, bill very 
broad; chin, sides of the cheeks, abdomen, vent and rump 
red: the great-billed tody of Latham. 
16. Todus rubecula.—Cinereous, with orange throat and 
breast, and white abdomen: the red-breasted tody of La¬ 
tham.—Native of New Holland. 
17. Todus xanthogaster, or flavigaster. — Brown-cinere¬ 
ous, six inches long; beneath luteous, with pale bill: the 
yellow-bellied tody of Latham.—Native of New Holland. 
18. Todus cristatus.—Crest crimson; body brown, spotted 
with white.—Found in Guinea. 
TODW1CK, a parish of England, West Riding of York¬ 
shire ; 7j miles south-east-by-south of Rotherham. 
TOE, s. [ca, Saxon ; teen, Dutch.] The divided extre¬ 
mities of the feet; the fingers of the feet. 
Come all you spirits. 
And fill me from the crown to the toe, topful 
Of direst cruelty. Shakspeare. 
TOE HEAD, a cape of Scotland, on the south-west coast 
of the island of Lewis, in that part called Harris; 42 miles 
south-west of Stornoway. Lat. 57. 50. N. long. 7. 5. W. 
TOE HEAD, a cape on the south coast of Ireland, in the 
county of Cork. Lat. 51. 27. N. long. 9. 9. W. 
TOELCHUS DE APIE, a district of South America, in 
the country of Patagonia. 
TOELCHUS DE LA CABALLO, a district of South 
America, in the country of Patagonia. 
TOENJOLOKER, a small island in the Eastern Seas. 
Lat. 5. 30. S. long. 132. 32. E. 
TOFO'RE, adv. [topopan, Saxon.] Before. Obsolete. 
It is an epdogue to make plain 
Some obscure precedence that hath t of ore been sain. 
Shakspeare. 
TOFO'RE, prep, [copop, Sax.] Before. Obsolete. —So 
shall they depart the manor with the corn and the bacon 
to fore him that bath won it. Spectator. 
‘Vol. XXIV. No. 1624. 
25 
TOFT, s. [ toftum , low Latin; topt, Su. Goth, fundi 
pars aedificiis occupata; toft, Dan. et Scano-Goth. agrorum 
pars aedificiis vicina. Serenius.~] A place where a mes¬ 
suage has stood. Cowel. 
TOFT, a parish of England, in Cambridgeshire ; 5 miles 
east of Caxton.—2. A hamlet in Cheshire; H mile south of 
NetherKnutsford.—3. A hamlet in Lincolnshire; 3| miles 
west-south-west of Bourne.—4. A parish in Lincolnshire; 
4j miles west of Market Raisen. 
TOFT, Mgnks, or Monacorum, a parish of England, 
in Cambridgeshire; 11 miles south-west of Great Yarmouth. 
TOFTES, or Toftrees, a parish of England, in Nor¬ 
folk ; 2^ miles south-west of Fakenham. 
TOFTS, West, a parish of England, in Norfolk; 6J miles 
north-north-west of Thetford. 
TO'FUS. See Tophus. 
TOGA, in Antiquity, a wide woollen gown, or mantle, 
without sleeves, used among the Romans, both by men and 
women. 
In process of time, none wore the toga but lev/d women : 
whence that of Horace, in matrona, ancilla , peccesve 
togata. Lib. i. sat. ii. ver. 63. 
The toga was of divers colours, and admitted of various 
ornaments: there was that called toga domestica, worn 
within doors; togaforensis, worn abroad ; toga f/iilitaris, 
used by soldiers, tucked up after the Gabinian fashion ; and 
toga picta, or triumphalis, wherein the victorious triumphed: 
this was embroidered with palms; that without any orna¬ 
ments was called toga pura. 
Sigonius distinguishes the several togae, or Roman gowns, 
into pura, or viri/is, Candida, pulla, picta, prcetexta, 
trabea, and pahularnentum. 
TO'GATED, adj. [togatus, Lat.] Gowned; toged.— 
They saw a comedy acted in Christ Church-hall;—yet it did 
not take with the courtiers so well as it did with the togated 
crew. A. Wood. 
TOGDA, or Todga, a town or district of Western 
Africa, in the province of Sigilmessa; 50 miles west of 
Sigilmessa. 
TOGEBAUT, a village of Irak, in Persia, 81 miles north 
of Ispahan. 
TO'GED, adj. [togatus, Lat.] Gowned ; dressed in 
gowns. 
The bookish theoric. 
Wherein the toged consuls can propose 
As masterly as he ; mere prattle, without practice. 
Is all his soldiership. Shakspeare. 
TOGE'THER, adv. [cogseSep, Saxon.] In company.— 
We turned o’er many books together. Shakspeare. —Not 
apart; not in separation.—That king joined humanity and 
policy together. Bacon. —In the same place. 
She lodgeth heat and cold, and moist and dry. 
And life and death, and peace and war together. Davies. 
In the same time.—While he and I live together, I shall 
not be thought the worst poet. Dryden. —Without inter¬ 
mission.—The Portuguese expected his return for almost an 
age together after the battle. Dryden. —In concert.—The 
subject is his confederacy with Henry the Eighth, and the 
wars they made together upon France. Addison. —In con¬ 
tinuity. 
Some tree’s broad leaves together sew’d. 
And girded on our loins, may cover round. Milton. 
TOGETHER •with. In union with; in a state of mixture 
with.—Take the bad together with the good. Dryden. 
TOGGENBURG, The, a long valley in the north of 
Switzerland, lying between the cantons of Appenzel and 
Zurich. From these it is separated by mountains, which 
render it narrow; but in length it exceeds 50 English miles. 
It is traversed by the river Thur, from which it sometimes 
takes the name of the Thurthal. It is divided into Upper 
and Lower. 
TOGOMI, a town of Niphon, in Japan ; 80 miles north¬ 
west of Meaco. 
H TOGOSOHATCHIE 
