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"Section M, N, and O"

. . sentiment in
inordinate vanity. Burke.


Whig and Tory were merged and swallowed up in
the transcendent duties of patriots.
De
Quincey.


Merge, v. i. To be sunk, swallowed
up, or lost.


Native irresolution had merged in stronger
motives.
I. Taylor.


Mer"ger (?), n. 1.
One who, or that which, merges.


2. (Law) An absorption of one estate,
or one contract, in another, or of a minor offense in a
greater.


Mer"i*carp (?), n. [Gr.
me`ros a part + karpo`s fruit.] (Bot.)
One carpel of an umbelliferous fruit. See
Cremocarp.


Mer"ide (? or ?), n. [Gr. &?; a part.]
(Biol.) A permanent colony of cells or plastids which may
remain isolated, like Rotifer, or may multiply by gemmation to form
higher aggregates, termed zoides.
Perrier.


Me*rid"i*an (?), a. [F.
méridien, L.


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