a. [ Gr. &unr_;, &unr_;, fr. &unr_; an abortion. ] Tending to cause abortion. [ 1913 Webster ]
v. t. To blot; to stain. Chaucer. [ 1913 Webster ]
v. t.
The brief was writ and blotted all with gore. Gascoigne. [ 1913 Webster ]
It blots thy beauty, as frosts do bite the meads. Shak. [ 1913 Webster ]
Blot not thy innocence with guiltless blood. Rowe. [ 1913 Webster ]
One act like this blots out a thousand crimes. Dryden. [ 1913 Webster ]
He sung how earth blots the moon's gilded wane. Cowley. [ 1913 Webster ]
v. i. To take a blot;
n. [ Cf. Icel. blettr, Dan. plet. ]
This deadly blot in thy digressing son. Shak. [ 1913 Webster ]
n. [ Cf. Dan. blot bare, naked, Sw. blott, d. bloot, G. bloss, and perh. E. bloat. ]
He is too great a master of his art to make a blot which may be so easily hit. Dryden. [ 1913 Webster ]
n. [ Cf. OE. blacche in blacchepot blacking pot, akin to black, as bleach is akin to bleak. See Black, a., or cf. Blot a spot. ]
Spots and blotches . . . some red, others yellow. Harvey. [ 1913 Webster ]
Foul scurf and blotches him defile. Thomson. [ 1913 Webster ]
a. Marked or covered with blotches. [ 1913 Webster ]
To give their blotched and blistered bodies ease. Drayton. [ 1913 Webster ]
a. Having blotches. [ 1913 Webster ]
v. t.
a. Without blot. [ 1913 Webster ]
n.
a. (Painting) Characterized by blots or heavy touches; coarsely depicted; wanting in delineation. Ruskin. [ 1913 Webster ]
A kind of thick, bibulous, unsized paper, used to absorb superfluous ink from a freshly written manuscript, and thus prevent blots. [ 1913 Webster ]
adj. def>drunk{ 1 }. [ colloq. ] [ PJC ]
n. [ F. simbleau. ] The harness of a drawloom. [ 1913 Webster ]