U T R 
towns, the soil being dry, and having a slight degree of 
elevation. Its population is about 35,000; 18 miles south- 
south-east of Amsterdam. Lat. 52. 5. 31. N. long. 5. 7. 
16. E. 
UTRECHT, New, a township of the United States, in 
King’s county, New York. Population 907. 
UTRERA, a considerable town of the south-west of 
Spain, in Andalusia; 14 miles east-south-east of Seville. 
Lat. 37. 9. 53. N. long. 5. 7. 44. W. 
UTRICULARIA [utriculus, a little bottle , so called from 
the small appendages to the root], in Botany, a genus of the 
class diandria, order monogynia, natural order corydales, 
lysimachise (Juss .)—Generic Character. Calyx : perianth 
two-leaved; leaflets ovate, concave, very small, equal, deci¬ 
duous. Corolla one-petalled, ringent; upper lip flat, obtuse, 
erect; lower bigger, flat, entire; palate heart-shaped, pro¬ 
minent between the lips. Nectary horned, produced from 
the base of the petal. Stamina: filaments two, very short, 
curved in. Anthers small, cohering. Pistil: germ globular, 
large, one-celled. Style filiform, length of the calyx. Stigma 
conical. Pericarp: capsule globular, large, one-celled. 
Seeds numerous .—Essential Character. Corolla ringent 
spurred. Calyx two leaved, equal. Capsule one-celled. 
1. Utricularia Alpina.—Nectary awl-shaped; leaves ovate, 
quite entire. Roots fibrous, ash coloured, with small round 
tubercles as in the potato.—Native of Martinico, on the 
highest mountains, on a wet open meadow: flowering in 
February. 
2. Utricularia foliosa.—Nectary conical; fruits drooping ; 
radicles destitute of appendages. This resembles our com¬ 
mon sort very much, but the root is creeping.—-Native of 
South America. 
3. Utricularia vulgaris, or common bladder-wort or 
hooded milfoil.—Nectary conical; scape few - flowered. 
The fibrous floating roots, slightly attached to the mud, 
are perennial. The stem likewise floats horizontally un¬ 
der water alternately divided into capillary branches, with 
bristly leaves bearing little compressed curved bladders, 
open, and bearded at the tip, containing a bubble of air, and 
a drop of watery fluid, in which, when highly magnified, 
appears a quantity of extremely minute solid particles. 
Aquatic insects frequently take up their lodging in these 
bladders.—-Native of Europe, in ditches and stagnant waters: 
flowering after Midsummer. 
4. Utricularia minor, or small bladderwort or hooded 
milfoil.—Nectary keeled, very short, obtuse. Roots capil- 
laceous, very tender, floating, loaded with very small mem¬ 
branaceous bladders. Scape length of the finger, simple, 
very slender, dividing towards the top into three peduncles, 
having abracte undereach. Leaves radical, pinnate, capil- 
laceous, with very few equal pinnas.—Native of Europe: 
flowering at the same time with the other. This and utricu¬ 
laria vulgaris are not uncommon in England. 
5. Utricularia obtusa, or blunt-horned bladder-wort.—Nec¬ 
tary bent in, obtuse, subemarginate.—Native of Jamaica, in 
marshy rivulets: flowering the whole summer. 
6. Utricularia subulata, or awl-shaped bladder-wort.— 
Nectary awl shaped.—Native of Virginia. 
7. Utricularia gibba, or gibbous bladder-wort.—Nectary 
gibbous.—Native of Virginia. 
8. Utricularia bifida, or cloven bladder-wort. — Scape 
naked, bifid.—Native of China. 
9. Utricularia capillacea, or hair-like bladder-wort.—Scape 
naked capillary, three-flowered; flowers nodding; capsule 
awl-shaped.—Native of the East Indies. 
10. Utricularia ccerulea, or blue bladder-wort.—Scape 
naked; scales alternate, wandering, awl-shaped.—Native of 
Ceylon and Malabar. 
11. Utricularia stellaris, or starry bladder-wort.—bladdery 
whorl of the bractes ciliary.—Native of the East Indies, in 
rice fields, where the water is deepest. 
12. Utricularia recurva, or recurved bladder-wort.—Leaf¬ 
less ; nectary recurved; spike simple.—In Hon-mo river, near 
the capital of Cochinchina. 
13. Utricularia aurea, or golden bladder-wort.—Leafless ; 
Voe. XXIV. No. 1653. 
U T T 521 
nectary conical-compressed ; flowers in racemes.—Native of 
Cochinchina, in slow-flowing rivers. 
UTTENWEILER, a small town of the south-west of 
Germany, in Wirtemberg, near Riedlingen, containing 1000 
inhabitants. 
U'TTER, aclj. [uttep, Saxon.] Situate on the outside, 
or remote from the centre. 
In my flight 
Through utter and through middle darkness borne, 
I sung of chaos, and eternal night. Milton. 
Placed beyond any compass; out of any place. 
Pursue these sons of darkness; drive them out 
From all heaven’s bounds, into the utter deep. Milton. 
Extreme; excessive; utmost. This seems to be Milton’s 
meaning here; though the former sense may serve. 
Such place eternal justice had prepar’d 
For those rebellious; here their prison ordain’d 
In utter darkness; and their portion set 
As far remov’d from God, and light of heav’n, 
As from the center thrice to th’ utmost pole. Milton. 
Complete; total.-—The parliament thought the utter tak¬ 
ing it away necessary for the preservation of the kingdom. 
Clarendon. —Peremptory-—There could not be any other 
estimate made of the loss, than by the utter refusal of the 
auxiliary regiments of London and Kent to march farther. 
Clarendon.— Perfect; mere. — They feel fewer corporal 
pains, and are utter strangers to all those anxious thoughts 
which disquiet mankind. Atterbury. 
To U f TTER, v. a. [from the adjective; to make public, 
or let out; palam facere. ] To speak; to pronounce; to 
express.—These very words I’ve heard him utter. Shak- 
speare. —To disclose; to discover; to publish.—I meant my 
words should not reach your ears; but what I uttered was 
most true. Dry den. —To sell; to vend. 
Such mortal drugs I have, but Mantua’s law 
Is death to any he that utters them. Shakspeare. 
To disperse; to emit at large.—To preserve us from ruin, 
the whole kingdom should continue in a firm resolution 
never to receive or utter this fatal coin. Swift. —To put 
forth. 
Seest thou thilk same hawthorn stud, 
How bragly it begins to bud. 
And utter his tender head ? Spenser. 
U'TTERABLE, adj. Expressible; such as may be ut¬ 
tered. 
UTTERANCE, s. Pronunciation; manner of speaking. 
He, with utt'rance grave, and countenance sad. 
From point to point discours’d his voyage. Spenser. 
\Outrance, French.] Extremity; terms of extreme hos¬ 
tility. Out of use. 
Come, fate, into the list. 
And champion me to the utterance. Shakspeare. 
Vocal expression; emission from the mouth. 
Till Adam, though no less than Eve abash’d. 
At length gave utterance to these words constrain’d. 
Milton. 
Sale.—It will draw out of the inhabited country of Ireland 
provisions and victuals, and many necessaries, because they 
shall be sure of utterance. Bacon. 
UTTERBY, a parish of England, in Lincolnshire; 5 
miles north-by-west of Louth.—A hamlet of the same county, 
in the parish o f Clee. 
U'TTERER, s. One who pronounces. A divulger; a 
discloser. 
Utterers of secrets he from thence debarr’d; 
Babblers of folly, and blazers of crime. Spenser. 
A seller; a vender. 
UTTERLY, adv. Fully; completely; perfectly. For 
the most part, in an ill sense. 
All your interest in those territories 
Is utterly bereft you ; all is lost. Shakspeare. 
5 P UTTERMOST, 
