Page:Letters to Squire Pedant in the East.pdf/86

VOCABULARY. 79 E-vig-i-la’-tion, a watching.

E-vince', to show.

Ev-i-ter'-nal, eternal in a limited sense.

Ev-i-tate', to avoid.

Ev-i-ta-tion, act of avoiding.

E-vic-tion, dispossession.

Ev-o-cate, to call forth.

Ev-o-lu'-tion, act of unfolding.

E-vom'-i-tion,act of vomiting.

Ex-a'-gi-tate, to shake.

Ex-san'-gui-ous, bloodless.

Ex-a-cerb'-ate, to irritate, sour.

Ex-an'-i-mate, lifeless.

Ex-an-tla-tion, act of drawing off.

Ex-ar-tic-u-la-tion, dislocation.

Ex-as-per-a'-tion, the act of getting angry.

Ex-auc'-to-ra-tion, act of being dismissed from service.

Ex-cau-date', without a tail.

Ex-co-ri-a'-tion, act of taking off the skin.

Ex-cru'-ci-ate, to torment.

Ex-cu-ba'-tion, the act of watching all night.

Ex-e-cra’-tion, curse.

Ex-en-te-rate, to disembowel.

Ex-er-ci-ta'-tion, exercise, practice.

Ex-haust', to drain out.

Ex-hil-a-rate, to enliven

Ex-ig-u'-i-ty, smallness, slenderness.

Ex-ig'-u-ous, small.

Ex-il-i-ty, slenderness, thinness.

Ex-is-ten'-tial, existing.

Ex'-it, going out, or departure.

Ex-i'-tial, destructive to life.

Ex-o-lete', obsolete.

Ex-on'-er-ate, to disburden.

Ex-ot-i-cism, a foreign idiom.