Brain fag . (Med.) See Cerebropathy.
Fag-end (Fag"-end") n.
1. An end of poorer quality, or in a spoiled condition, as the coarser end of a web of cloth, the untwisted
end of a rope, ect.
2. The refuse or meaner part of anything.
The fag-end of business. Collier. Fagging (Fag"ging) n. Laborious drudgery; esp., the acting as a drudge for another at an English school.
Fagot (Fag"ot) (fag"ut) n. [F., prob. aug. of L. fax, facis, torch, perh. orig., a bundle of sticks; cf. Gr.
fa`kelos bundle, fagot. Cf. Fagotto.]
1. A bundle of sticks, twigs, or small branches of trees, used for fuel, for raising batteries, filling ditches,
or other purposes in fortification; a fascine. Shak.
2. A bundle of pieces of wrought iron to be worked over into bars or other shapes by rolling or hammering
at a welding heat; a pile.
3. (Mus.) A bassoon. See Fagotto.
4. A person hired to take the place of another at the muster of a company. [Eng.] Addison.
5. An old shriveled woman. [Slang, Eng.]
Fagot iron, iron, in bars or masses, manufactured from fagots. Fagot vote, the vote of a person
who has been constituted a voter by being made a landholder, for party purposes. [Political cant, Eng.]
Fagot (Fag"ot) v. t. [imp. & p. p. Fagoted; p. pr. & vb. n. Fagoting.] To make a fagot of; to bind
together in a fagot or bundle; also, to collect promiscuously. Dryden.
Fagotto (||Fa*got"to) n. [It. See Fagot.] (Mus.) The bassoon; so called from being divided into parts
for ease of carriage, making, as it were, a small fagot.
Faham (||Fa"ham) n. The leaves of an orchid of the islands of Bourbon and Mauritius, used (in France)
as a substitute for Chinese tea.
Fahlband (||Fahl"band`) n. [G., fr. fahl dun-colored + band a band.] (Mining) A stratum in crystalline
rock, containing metallic sulphides. Raymond.
Fahlerz (Fahl"erz Fahl"band) n. [G. fahlerz; fahl dun-colored, fallow + erz ore.] (Min.) Same as Tetrahedrite.
Fahlunite (Fah"lun*ite) n. [From Fahlun, a place in Sweden.] (Min.) A hydrated silica of alumina,
resulting from the alteration of iolite. [1913 Webster]
Fahrenheit (Fah"ren*heit) a. [G.] Conforming to the scale used by Gabriel Daniel Fahrenheit in the
graduation of his thermometer; of or relating to Fahrenheit's thermometric scale. n. The Fahrenheit
thermometer or scale.
The Fahrenheit thermometer is so graduated that the freezing point of water is at 32 degrees above the
zero of its scale, and the boiling point at 212 degrees above. It is commonly used in the United States
and in England.
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