The Century dictionary and cyclopedia; a work of universal reference in all departments of knowledge, with a new atlas of the world .. . es, bubbling rAles, fineor coarse, produced by liiiuid or semiliquid in the bron-chial tubes, Ijronchi, trachea, or larynx.—Pleural r&ie,an abnornnil sound produced within the pleura, as a fric-tion sound, or metallic tinkling, or a snccussion sound.—Subcrepitant iSile, a very fine bronchial bubbling r&le. Same as crepitant rdle. [Rare.] He . . instructed his lordship in all the rakery andIntrigues of the lewd town. Roger Xorth, Lord Guilford,


The Century dictionary and cyclopedia; a work of universal reference in all departments of knowledge, with a new atlas of the world .. . es, bubbling rAles, fineor coarse, produced by liiiuid or semiliquid in the bron-chial tubes, Ijronchi, trachea, or larynx.—Pleural r&ie,an abnornnil sound produced within the pleura, as a fric-tion sound, or metallic tinkling, or a snccussion sound.—Subcrepitant iSile, a very fine bronchial bubbling r&le. Same as crepitant rdle. [Rare.] He . . instructed his lordship in all the rakery andIntrigues of the lewd town. Roger Xorth, Lord Guilford, II. 300. rakeshamet (raksham), «. [< rakel, v., + It., as if one who gathers shame to him-self; fonned in moral amendment of rakehell.]A vile, dissolute wretch. Tormentors, rooks, and rakeshames, sold to lucre. Milton, Reformation in Eng., 11. rakestalet (rakstal), «. [Also dial, rakestele;< ra/.cl + stalei^, steal-.] A rako-handle. That tale is not worth a rakryfele. Chaucer, Wile of Baths Tale, L 93. rake-vein (rakvan), n. In lead-ntininij, in Eng-land, a vertical or highly inclined Virijii , ,!;.,i:„ST:rj::, as distinguished from the flat-vein, or flat, and Ralfsia (ralfsi-ii), ». [NL. (Berkeley), named the pipe-vein (a mass of ore filling an irregu-larly elongated cavern-like opening). [Derby-shire, Eng.]raki, rakee (rake), n. [< Turk, raki, spirits,brandy. Cf. arraek, r«ctll.] A colorless aro-matic spirituous liquor, prepared from grain-spirit, as in Greece, or from distilled grapo-juice, as in the Levant. The hill-men on such occasions consume a coarse sort ofrakee made from corn. If. H. Russell, Diary in India, IL grain spirit, which is used in the country for mak-ing raki. U. S. Cons. Rep., No. Ixvili. (1SS6X p. 040- raking^ (rakiug), ». [< ME. rakynge; verbaln. of rakc^, x\] 1. The art of using a rake ; agathering or clearance with or as if with arake; also, that which is raked or raked such a raking


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