The century dictionary and cyclopedia, a work of universal reference in all departments of knowledge with a new atlas of the world . n, El-Medinah, p. 401. hadji, hajji (), «. [Ai-. (and Pers.) hdjji,common form of /(C7j/i a pilgrim, < hajja, go on apilgrimage: see hadj.~] A Mussulman who hasperformed his hadj, or pilgrimage to Mecca, andwlio afterward bears the designation as a title6t honor: as, Hadji Khalfa. The title is also givento a Greek or an Anneuian who has visited the holy sepul-cher at .lerusirlem. Also spelled hatljee. Tlie title of Hadji indicates that the bearer has made


The century dictionary and cyclopedia, a work of universal reference in all departments of knowledge with a new atlas of the world . n, El-Medinah, p. 401. hadji, hajji (), «. [Ai-. (and Pers.) hdjji,common form of /(C7j/i a pilgrim, < hajja, go on apilgrimage: see hadj.~] A Mussulman who hasperformed his hadj, or pilgrimage to Mecca, andwlio afterward bears the designation as a title6t honor: as, Hadji Khalfa. The title is also givento a Greek or an Anneuian who has visited the holy sepul-cher at .lerusirlem. Also spelled hatljee. Tlie title of Hadji indicates that the bearer has made thepilgrimage to Mecca. T. B. Aldrich, Ponkapog to Pesth, p. 209, note. During my stay great throngs of hadjis poured into the town, arriving by the Teheran road. ODonovan, Merv, x. Hxmaria Hadrosauridse (had-rO-sari-de), ». pi. [NL., <Httdrosaartts + -(Wic] A family of ornithopoddinosam-ian reptiles with teeth in several rows,forming, with use, a tessellated grinding-sur-face. Hadrosaurus (had-ro-sarus), w. [NL., < ;, thick, stout, bulky, -I- navpoq, a lizard.] Agenus of dinosaurian reptiles, tyjjical of the. Skeleton oi Hadrosatiriis foulki.(Drawn from specimen in Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadel-phia, with corrections accorcling to latest discoveries.) family Hadrosanridee. The original species ofthese gigantic iguauodons was H. foidhi, fromHaddonield in New Jersey. </. Leidtj, 1856. hadst (hadst). Second person singular of had,preterit of have, contracted from haddest. hae (ha), V. A Scotcli form of haie. haecceity (hek-sei-ti), n. [< ML. hacceita(t-)s,tliisness, < L. h(Fc, fem. of hie, this: see hiejacet. This word was formed by Duns Scotusabout 1300, and was based, as he explained,upon the fem. jironoun because the abstractquality thisness is fem. as being expressed,in L., like other abstract qualities, by a nounwiththefem. sufBx-to(N)s. At a later date theform hicceita{t-)s, < L. hie, m., and the con-up-tion ecceita{t-).< arose, but


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