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tra_ in our older books and court-rolls. If the tenement was an ancient one, it was _vetus_ or _antiquum astrum_; if a tenure of recent creation (or a new-take, as it is called in some manors), it was _novum astrum_. The villenage tenant of it was an _astrarius_. "W.P.P." may satisfy himself of these facts by referring to the printed _Plautorum Abbrevietis_, fo. 282.; to Fleta, _Comment. Juris. Anglicani_, ed. 1685, p. 217.; and to Ducange, Spelman, and Cowel, under the words "Astrum," "Astrarius," and "Astre." In the very locality to which "W.P.P." refers, he will find that the word "Auster" is "Astrum" in the oldest court-rolls, and that the term is not confined to North Curry, but is very prevalent in the eastern half of Somerset. At the present day, an _auster_ tenement is a species of copyhold, with all the incidents to that tenure. It is noticed in the Journal of the Archaeological Institute, in a recent critique on Dr. Evans's Leicestershire words, and is very familar to legal practitioners of any experience in the district alluded to. E. Smirke. _Tureen_ (No. 16. p. 246.).--There is properly no such word. It is a corruption of the French _terrine_, an earthen vessel in which soup is served. It is in Bailey's Dictionary. I take this opportunity of suggesting whether that the word "_swinging_," applied by Goldsmith to his tureen, should be rather spelt _swingeing_; though the former is the more usual way: a _swinging_ dish and a _swingeing_ are different things, and Goldsmith meant the latter. C. {308} _Burning the Dead._--"T." will find some information on this subject in Sir Thomas Browne's _Hydriotaphia_, chap. i., which appears to favour his view except in the following extract: "The same practice extended also far west, and besides Heruleans, Getes and Thracians, was in use with most of the Celtae, Sarmatians, Germans, Gauls, Danes, Swedes, Norwegians; not to omit some use thereof among _Carthaginians_, and _Americans_." The Carthaginians most probably received the custom from their ancestors the Phoenicians, but where did the Americans get it? Henry St. Chad. Corpus Christi Hall, Maidstone, Feb. 8. 1850. _Burning the Dead._--Your correspondent "T." (No. 14. p. 216.) can hardly have overlooked the case of Dido, in his inquiry "whether the practice of burning the dead has ever been in vogue amongst any people, excepting the inhabitants of Europe and Asia?" Accordi
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