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FASCIA

Volume 8 · 152 words · 1810 Edition

in antiquity, a thin skin which the Roman women wrapped round their bodies, next to the skin, in order to make them slender. Something of this sort seems also to have been in use amongst the Grecian ladies, if we can depend upon the representation given by Terence, Eun. act. ii. sc. 4.

Haud similis est virginum nostrarum, quas matres student Demissis humeris effe—vinculo corpore, ut graciles sint.

in Architecture, signifies any flat member having a considerable breadth and but a small projection, as the band of an architrave, larmier, &c. In brick buildings, the jutting out of the brick beyond the windows in the several stories except the highest are called facias or facies.

FASCIA Latina, in Anatomy, a muscle of the leg, called also semi-membranous. See ANATOMY, Table of the Muscles.

FASCLE, in Astronomy, the belts seen on the disk of the superior planets, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn.—See ASTRONOMY, passim.