The century dictionary and cyclopedia, a work of universal reference in all departments of knowledge with a new atlas of the world . eica trifoUata, belonging to therue family, having trifoliate leaves, and small horde = Sw. hord, < P. horde (IGth century) =Sp. horda = Pg. hordu = It. orda, a horde,= Bohem. Serv. ordija = Little Russ. orda, anarmy, = Ar. aurdui, a camp, < Turk, ordu, urdu,ordi, orda, a camp, < Peru, ordu, a eoiut, camp,horde of Tatars, also urdu, a camp, an army,the Hindustani language : see Urdu. The ini-tial h is unoriginal, and is due to the French.]1. A tribe or t


The century dictionary and cyclopedia, a work of universal reference in all departments of knowledge with a new atlas of the world . eica trifoUata, belonging to therue family, having trifoliate leaves, and small horde = Sw. hord, < P. horde (IGth century) =Sp. horda = Pg. hordu = It. orda, a horde,= Bohem. Serv. ordija = Little Russ. orda, anarmy, = Ar. aurdui, a camp, < Turk, ordu, urdu,ordi, orda, a camp, < Peru, ordu, a eoiut, camp,horde of Tatars, also urdu, a camp, an army,the Hindustani language : see Urdu. The ini-tial h is unoriginal, and is due to the French.]1. A tribe or troop of Asiatic nomads dwellingin tents or wagons, and migrating from placeto place to procure pasturage for their cattle,or for war or plunder. His [a Tatars] hont, which consisted of about a thou-sand housholds of a kindred. Purchas, Pilgrimage, p. —2. Any clan or troop; a gang; a mi-gratory crew; a multitude. Each valley, each sequestered glen,Mustered its little horde of men. Scott, L. of the L., iii. is now one polishd horde,Formd of two mighty tribes, the Bores and Bored. Byron, Don Juan, xiii. Hop-tree {Ptglea tfi/otiata),a, Tnale flower; if, female flower; c, greenish-white flowers in terminal fruitisa2-celleaaiid2seeded5amara, winged all around, ? nior-de 6-lum) n • 11I horde bitter, and said to be used as a substitute for hops. Also ®°^J5?T ^ t /°T T 7 1 ) ^ caUed «.(^er-asA. (-la). [NL., neut., < LL. hordcolus, m., a : I . . clashd with Pagan hordes, and bore them , Holy Horde, a name given to the possessors of thekhanate of Kiptchak, a Mongol realm in eastern Eussiaand western and central Asia. This realm was foundedin the thirteenth century and overthiown in 1480. horde (hord), v. ».; pret. and pp. horded, [</(ocrfe, «.] To live in hordes; hud-dle together like the members of a migratorytribe: usually followed by together. Byron. hordeaceoUS (h6r-de-ashius),


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