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"Section C"

[Obs.] Hickes.


The caduke pleasures of his world.

Bp. Fisher.


Cad"y (?), n. See
Cadie.


||Cæ"ca (?), n. pl. See
Cæcum.


Cæ"cal (?), a.
(Anat.)


1. Of or pertaining to the cæcum,
or blind gut.


2. Having the form of a cæcum, or
bag with one opening; baglike; as, the cæcal
extremity of a duct.


||Cæ"ci*as (?), n. [L.
caecias, Gr. &?;.] A wind from the northeast.
Milton.


Cæ*cil"i*an (?; 106), n. [L.
caecus blind. So named from the supposed blindness of the
species, the eyes being very minute.] (Zoöl.) A
limbless amphibian belonging to the order
Cæciliæ or Ophimorpha. See
Ophiomorpha.
[Written also
cœcilian.]


||Cæ"cum (?), n.; pl.
Cæcums, L. Cæca
(#). [L. caecus blind, invisible, concealed.]
(Anat.) (a) A cavity open at one end,
as the blind end of a canal or duct.


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