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It is not only important, but, in a degree necessary, that the people of this country, should have an American Dictionary of the English language; for, although the body of the language is the same as in England, and it is desirable to perpetuate that sameness, yet some differences must exist. Language is the expression of ideas; and if the people of one country cannot preserve an identity of ideas, they cannot retain an identity of language. |
LEECH, n.
See 2d
Leach.
See Leach,
The border or edge at the side of a
sail.
[Written also leach.]
Leech line, a line attached to the leech ropes of sails, passing up through blocks on the yards, to haul the leeches by. Totten. -- Leech rope, that part of the boltrope to which the side of a sail is sewed. A
physician or surgeon; a professor of the art of healing.
[Written also leach.] [Archaic] Spenser.
Leech, heal thyself. Wyclif (Luke iv. 23). Any one of numerous
genera and species of annulose worms, belonging to the order
Hirudinea, or Bdelloidea, esp. those species used in
medicine, as Hirudo medicinalis of Europe, and allied
species.
* In the mouth of bloodsucking leeches are three convergent, serrated jaws, moved by strong muscles. By the motion of these jaws a stellate incision is made in the skin, through which the leech sucks blood till it is gorged, and then drops off. The stomach has large pouches on each side to hold the blood. The common large bloodsucking leech of America (Macrobdella decora) is dark olive above, and red below, with black spots. Many kinds of leeches are parasitic on fishes; others feed upon worms and mollusks, and have no jaws for drawing blood. See Bdelloidea. Hirudinea, and Clepsine. A glass tube of peculiar
construction, adapted for drawing blood from a scarified part by
means of a vacuum.
Horse leech, a less powerful European leech (Hæmopis vorax), commonly attacking the membrane that lines the inside of the mouth and nostrils of animals that drink at pools where it lives. To treat as a
surgeon] to doctor; as, to leech wounds.
[Archaic] To bleed by the use of leeches.
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