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4 definitions found
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Mer·cu·ry
n.
1.
Rom. Myth.
A
Latin
god
of
commerce
and
gain
; --
treated
by
the
poets
as
identical
with
the
Greek
Hermes
,
messenger
of
the
gods
,
conductor
of
souls
to
the
lower
world
,
and
god
of
eloquence
.
2.
Chem.
A
metallic
element
mostly
obtained
by
reduction
from
cinnabar
,
one
of
its
ores
.
It
is
a
heavy
,
opaque
,
glistening
liquid
(
commonly
called
quicksilver
),
and
is
used
in
barometers
,
thermometers
,
etc
.
Specific
gravity
13.6.
Symbol
Hg
(
Hydrargyrum
).
Atomic
weight
199.8.
Mercury
has
a
molecule
which
consists
of
only
one
atom
.
It
was
named
by
the
alchemists
after
the
god
Mercury
,
and
designated
by
his
symbol
,
Note:
☞
Mercury
forms
alloys
,
called
amalgams
,
with
many
metals
,
and
is
thus
used
in
applying
tin
foil
to
the
backs
of
mirrors
,
and
in
extracting
gold
and
silver
from
their
ores
.
It
is
poisonous
,
and
is
used
in
medicine
in
the
free
state
as
in
blue
pill
,
and
in
its
compounds
as
calomel
,
corrosive
sublimate
,
etc
.
It
is
the
only
metal
which
is
liquid
at
ordinary
temperatures
,
and
it
solidifies
at
about
-39°
Centigrade
to
a
soft
,
malleable
,
ductile
metal
.
3.
Astron.
One
of
the
planets
of
the
solar
system
,
being
the
one
nearest
the
sun
,
from
which
its
mean
distance
is
about
36,000,000
miles
.
Its
period
is
88
days
,
and
its
diameter
3,000
miles
.
4.
A
carrier
of
tidings
;
a
newsboy
;
a
messenger
;
hence
,
also
,
a
newspaper
. --
Sir
J
.
Stephen
.
“The
monthly
Mercuries
.”
--
Macaulay
.
5.
Sprightly
or
mercurial
quality
;
spirit
;
mutability
;
fickleness
. [
Obs
.]
He
was
so
full
of
mercury
that
he
could
not
fix
long
in
any
friendship
,
or
to
any
design
.
--
Bp
.
Burnet
.
6.
Bot.
A
plant
(
Mercurialis annua
),
of
the
Spurge
family
,
the
leaves
of
which
are
sometimes
used
for
spinach
,
in
Europe
.
Note:
☞
The
name
is
also
applied
,
in
the
United
States
,
to
certain
climbing
plants
,
some
of
which
are
poisonous
to
the
skin
,
esp
.
to
the
Rhus Toxicodendron
,
or
poison
ivy
.
Dog's mercury
Bot.
,
Mercurialis perennis
,
a
perennial
plant
differing
from
Mercurialis annua
by
having
the
leaves
sessile
.
English mercury
Bot.
,
a
kind
of
goosefoot
formerly
used
as
a
pot
herb
; --
called
Good King Henry
.
Horn mercury
Min.
,
a
mineral
chloride
of
mercury
,
having
a
semitranslucent
,
hornlike
appearance
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Oak
n.
1.
Bot.
Any
tree
or
shrub
of
the
genus
Quercus
.
The
oaks
have
alternate
leaves
,
often
variously
lobed
,
and
staminate
flowers
in
catkins
.
The
fruit
is
a
smooth
nut
,
called
an
acorn
,
which
is
more
or
less
inclosed
in
a
scaly
involucre
called
the
cup
or
cupule
.
There
are
now
recognized
about
three
hundred
species
,
of
which
nearly
fifty
occur
in
the
United
States
,
the
rest
in
Europe
,
Asia
,
and
the
other
parts
of
North
America
,
a
very
few
barely
reaching
the
northern
parts
of
South
America
and
Africa
.
Many
of
the
oaks
form
forest
trees
of
grand
proportions
and
live
many
centuries
.
The
wood
is
usually
hard
and
tough
,
and
provided
with
conspicuous
medullary
rays
,
forming
the
silver
grain
.
2.
The
strong
wood
or
timber
of
the
oak
.
Note:
☞
Among
the
true
oaks
in
America
are
:
Barren oak
,
or
Black-jack
,
Quercus nigra
.
Basket oak
,
Quercus Michauxii
.
Black oak
,
Quercus tinctoria
; --
called
also
yellow oak
or
quercitron oak
.
Bur oak
(
see
under
Bur
.),
Quercus macrocarpa
; --
called
also
over-cup
or
mossy-cup oak
.
Chestnut oak
,
Quercus Prinus
and
Quercus densiflora
.
Chinquapin oak
(
see
under
Chinquapin
),
Quercus prinoides
.
Coast live oak
,
Quercus agrifolia
,
of
California
; --
also
called
enceno
.
Live oak
(
see
under
Live
),
Quercus virens
,
the
best
of
all
for
shipbuilding
;
also
,
Quercus Chrysolepis
,
of
California
.
Pin oak
.
Same
as
Swamp oak
.
Post oak
,
Quercus obtusifolia
.
Red oak
,
Quercus rubra
.
Scarlet oak
,
Quercus coccinea
.
Scrub oak
,
Quercus ilicifolia
,
Quercus undulata
,
etc
.
Shingle oak
,
Quercus imbricaria
.
Spanish oak
,
Quercus falcata
.
Swamp Spanish oak
,
or
Pin oak
,
Quercus palustris
.
Swamp white oak
,
Quercus bicolor
.
Water oak
,
Quercus aquatica
.
Water white oak
,
Quercus lyrata
.
Willow oak
,
Quercus Phellos
.
Among
the
true
oaks
in
Europe
are
:
Bitter oak
,
or
Turkey oak
,
Quercus Cerris
(
see
Cerris
).
Cork oak
,
Quercus Suber
.
English white oak
,
Quercus Robur
.
Evergreen oak
,
Holly oak
,
or
Holm oak
,
Quercus Ilex
.
Kermes oak
,
Quercus coccifera
.
Nutgall oak
,
Quercus infectoria
.
Note:
☞
Among
plants
called
oak
,
but
not
of
the
genus
Quercus
,
are
:
African oak
,
a
valuable
timber
tree
(
Oldfieldia Africana
).
Australian oak
or
She oak
,
any
tree
of
the
genus
Casuarina
(
see
Casuarina
).
Indian oak
,
the
teak
tree
(
see
Teak
).
Jerusalem oak
.
See
under
Jerusalem
.
New Zealand oak
,
a
sapindaceous
tree
(
Alectryon excelsum
).
Poison oak
,
a
shrub
once
not
distinguished
from
poison
ivy
,
but
now
restricted
to
Rhus toxicodendron
or
Rhus diversiloba
.
Silky oak
or
Silk-bark oak
,
an
Australian
tree
(
Grevillea robusta
).
Green oak
,
oak
wood
colored
green
by
the
growth
of
the
mycelium
of
certain
fungi
.
Oak apple
,
a
large
,
smooth
,
round
gall
produced
on
the
leaves
of
the
American
red
oak
by
a
gallfly
(
Cynips confluens
).
It
is
green
and
pulpy
when
young
.
Oak beauty
Zool.
,
a
British
geometrid
moth
(
Biston prodromaria
)
whose
larva
feeds
on
the
oak
.
Oak gall
,
a
gall
found
on
the
oak
.
See
2d
Gall
.
Oak leather
Bot.
,
the
mycelium
of
a
fungus
which
forms
leatherlike
patches
in
the
fissures
of
oak
wood
.
Oak pruner
.
Zool.
See
Pruner
,
the
insect
.
Oak spangle
,
a
kind
of
gall
produced
on
the
oak
by
the
insect
Diplolepis lenticularis
.
Oak wart
,
a
wartlike
gall
on
the
twigs
of
an
oak
.
The Oaks
,
one
of
the
three
great
annual
English
horse
races
(
the
Derby
and
St
.
Leger
being
the
others
).
It
was
instituted
in
1779
by
the
Earl
of
Derby
,
and
so
called
from
his
estate
.
To sport one's oak
,
to
be
“not
at
home
to
visitors,”
signified
by
closing
the
outer
(
oaken
)
door
of
one's
rooms
. [
Cant
,
Eng
.
Univ
.]
◄
►
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Poi·son
n.
1.
Any
agent
which
,
when
introduced
into
the
animal
organism
,
is
capable
of
producing
a
morbid
,
noxious
,
or
deadly
effect
upon
it
;
as
,
morphine
is
a
deadly
poison
;
the
poison
of
pestilential
diseases
.
2.
That
which
taints
or
destroys
moral
purity
or
health
;
as
,
the
poison
of
evil
example
;
the
poison
of
sin
.
Poison ash
.
Bot.
(a)
A
tree
of
the
genus
Amyris
(
Amyris balsamifera
)
found
in
the
West
Indies
,
from
the
trunk
of
which
a
black
liquor
distills
,
supposed
to
have
poisonous
qualities
.
(b)
The
poison
sumac
(
Rhus venenata
). [
U
.
S
.]
Poison dogwood
Bot.
,
poison
sumac
.
Poison fang
Zool.
,
one
of
the
superior
maxillary
teeth
of
some
species
of
serpents
,
which
,
besides
having
the
cavity
for
the
pulp
,
is
either
perforated
or
grooved
by
a
longitudinal
canal
,
at
the
lower
end
of
which
the
duct
of
the
poison
gland
terminates
.
See
Illust
.
under
Fang
.
Poison gland
Biol.
,
a
gland
,
in
animals
or
plants
,
which
secretes
an
acrid
or
venomous
matter
,
that
is
conveyed
along
an
organ
capable
of
inflicting
a
wound
.
Poison hemlock
Bot.
,
a
poisonous
umbelliferous
plant
(
Conium maculatum
).
See
Hemlock
.
Poison ivy
Bot.
,
a
poisonous
climbing
plant
(
formerly
Rhus Toxicodendron
,
or
Rhus radicans
,
now
classified
as
Toxicodendron radicans
)
of
North
America
.
It
is
common
as
a
climbing
vine
,
especially
found
on
tree
trunks
,
or
walls
,
or
as
a
low, spreading vine
or
as
a
shrub
.
As
a
low
vine
it
grows
well
in
lightly
shaded
areas
,
recognizable
by
growing
in
clusters
of
three
leaves
.
Its
leaves
are
trifoliate
,
rhombic-ovate
,
and
variously
notched
.
Its
form
varies
slightly
from
location
to
location
,
leading
to
some
speculation
that
it
may
consist
of
more
than
one
species
.
Many
people
are
poisoned
by
it
,
though
some
appear
resistant
to
its
effects
.
Touching
the
leaves
may
leave
a
residue
of
an
oil
on
the
skin
,
and
if
not
washed
off
quickly
,
sensitive
areas
of
skin
become
reddened
and
develop
multiple
small
blisters
,
lasting
for
several
days
to
several
weeks
,
and
causing
a
persistent
itch
.
The
toxic
reaction
is
due
to
an
oil
,
present
in
all
parts
of
the
plant
except
the
pollen
,
called
urushiol
,
the
active
component
of
which
is
the
compound
pentadecylacatechol
(
according
to
Charles">http://www.jaxmed.com/articles/Diseases/poison_ivy_dermatitis.htm">Charles
H
. Booras).
See
Poison sumac
.
It
is
related
to
poison oak
,
and
is
also
called
mercury
.
Poison nut
.
Bot.
(a)
Nux
vomica
.
(b)
The
tree
which
yields
this
seed
(
Strychnos Nuxvomica
).
It
is
found
on
the
Malabar
and
Coromandel
coasts
.
Poison oak
Bot.
,
a
dermatitis-producing
plant
often
lumped
together
with
the
poison
ivy
(
Toxicodendron radicans
)
in
common
terminology
,
but
more
properly
distinguished
as
the
more
shrubby
Toxicodendron quercifolium
(
syn
.
Toxicodendron diversilobum
),
common
in
California
and
Oregon
.
Opinion
varies
as
to
whether
the
poison
oak
and
poison
ivy
are
only
variants
of
a
single
species
.
See
poison ivy
,
above
.
Poison sac
.
Zool.
Same
as
Poison gland
,
above
.
See
Illust
.
under
Fang
.
Poison sumac
Bot.
,
a
poisonous
shrub
formerly
considered
to
be
of
the
genus
Rhus
(
Rhus venenata
),
but
now
classified
as
Toxicodendron vernix
; --
also
called
poison ash
,
poison dogwood
,
and
poison elder
.
It
has
pinnate
leaves
on
graceful
and
slender
common
petioles
,
and
usually
grows
in
swampy
places
.
Both
this
plant
and
the
poison
ivy
(
Toxicodendron radicans
,
formerly
Rhus Toxicodendron
)
have
clusters
of
smooth
greenish
white
berries
,
while
the
red-fruited
species
of
this
genus
are
harmless
.
The
tree
(
Rhus vernicifera
)
which
yields
the
celebrated
Japan
lacquer
is
almost
identical
with
the
poison
sumac
,
and
is
also
very
poisonous
.
The
juice
of
the
poison
sumac
also
forms
a
lacquer
similar
to
that
of
Japan
.
Syn:
--
Venom
;
virus
;
bane
;
pest
;
malignity
.
Usage:
--
Poison
,
Venom
.
Poison
usually
denotes
something
received
into
the
system
by
the
mouth
,
breath
,
etc
.
Venom
is
something
discharged
from
animals
and
received
by
means
of
a
wound
,
as
by
the
bite
or
sting
of
serpents
,
scorpions
,
etc
.
Hence
,
venom
specifically
implies
some
malignity
of
nature
or
purpose
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
I·vy
n.
;
pl
.
Ivies
Bot.
A
plant
of
the
genus
Hedera
(
Hedera helix
),
common
in
Europe
.
Its
leaves
are
evergreen
,
dark
,
smooth
,
shining
,
and
mostly
five-pointed
;
the
flowers
yellowish
and
small
;
the
berries
black
or
yellow
.
The
stem
clings
to
walls
and
trees
by
rootlike
fibers
.
Direct
The
clasping
ivy
where
to
climb
. --
Milton
.
Ye
myrtles
brown
,
with
ivy
never
sere
.
--
Milton
.
American ivy
.
Bot.
See
Virginia creeper
.
English ivy
Bot.
,
a
popular
name
in
America
for
the
ivy
proper
(
Hedera helix
).
German ivy
Bot.
,
a
creeping
plant
,
with
smooth
,
succulent
stems
,
and
fleshy
,
light-green
leaves
;
a
species
of
Senecio
(
Senecio scandens
).
Ground ivy
.
Bot.
Gill
(
Nepeta Glechoma
).
Ivy bush
.
Bot.
See
Mountain laurel
,
under
Mountain
.
Ivy owl
Zool.
,
the
barn
owl
.
Ivy tod
Bot.
,
the
ivy
plant
. --
Tennyson
.
Japanese ivy
Bot.
,
a
climbing
plant
(
Ampelopsis tricuspidata
),
closely
related
to
the
Virginia
creeper
.
Poison ivy
Bot.
,
an
American
woody
creeper
(
Rhus Toxicodendron
),
with
trifoliate
leaves
,
and
greenish-white
berries
.
It
is
exceedingly
poisonous
to
the
touch
for
most
persons
.
To pipe in an ivy leaf
,
to
console
one's
self
as
best
one
can
. [
Obs
.] --
Chaucer
.
West Indian ivy
,
a
climbing
plant
of
the
genus
Marcgravia
.
◄
►
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