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ERKE — ESPOUSALS NWAD ERKE.1

ERKE, n. Idle; slothful. [Not in use.] NWAD ERKE.1

ERMELIN. [See Ermin.] NWAD ERMELIN.1

ERMIN, ERMINE, n. NWAD ERMIN.1

1. An animal of the genus Mustela, an inhabitant of northern climates, in Europe and America. It nearly resembles the martin in shape, but the weasel, in food and manners. In winter, the fur is entirely white; in summer, the upper part of the body is of a pale tawny brown color, but the tail is tipped with black. The fur is much valued. NWAD ERMIN.2

2. The fur of the ermin. NWAD ERMIN.3

ERMINED, a. Clothed with ermin; adorned with the fur of the ermin; as ermined pride; ermined pomp. NWAD ERMINED.1

ERNE, AERNE, a Saxon word, signifying a place or receptacle, forms the termination of some English words, as well as Latin; as in barn, lantern, tavern, taberna. NWAD ERNE.1

ERODE, v.t. [L. erodo; e and rodo, to gnaw.] To eat in or away; to corrode; as, canker erodes the flesh. NWAD ERODE.1

The blood, being too sharp or thin, erodes the vessels. NWAD ERODE.2

ERODED, pp. Eaten; gnawed; corroded. NWAD ERODED.1

ERODING, ppr. Eating into; eating away; corroding. NWAD ERODING.1

EROGATE, v.t. [L. erogo.] To lay out; to give; to bestow upon. [Not used.] NWAD EROGATE.1

EROGATION, n. The act of conferring. [Not used.] NWAD EROGATION.1

EROSE, a. [L. erosus.] In botany, an erose leaf has small sinuses in the margin, as if gnawed. NWAD EROSE.1

EROSION, n. s as z. [L. erosio.] The act or operation of eating away. NWAD EROSION.1

1. The state of being eaten away; corrosion; canker. NWAD EROSION.2

EROTIC, EROTICAL, a. [Gr. love.] Pertaining to love; treating of love. NWAD EROTIC.1

EROTIC, n. An amorous composition or poem. NWAD EROTIC.2

ERPETOLOGIST, n. [Gr. reptile, discourse.] One who writes on the subject of reptiles, or is versed in the natural history of reptiles. NWAD ERPETOLOGIST.1

ERPETOLOGY, n. [supra.] That part of natural history which treats of reptiles. NWAD ERPETOLOGY.1

ERR, v.i. [L. erro.] NWAD ERR.1

1. To wander from the right way; to deviate from the true course or purpose. NWAD ERR.2

But errs not nature from this gracious end, NWAD ERR.3

From burning suns when livid deaths descend? NWAD ERR.4

2. To miss the right way, in morals or religion; to deviate from the path or line of duty; to stray by design or mistake. NWAD ERR.5

We have erred and strayed like lost sheep. NWAD ERR.6

3. To mistake; to commit error; to do wrong from ignorance or inattention. Men err in judgment from ignorance, from want of attention to facts, or from previous bias of mind. NWAD ERR.7

4. To wander; to ramble. NWAD ERR.8

A storm of strokes, well meant, with fury flies, NWAD ERR.9

And errs about their temples, ears, and eyes. NWAD ERR.10

ERRABLE, a. Liable to mistake; fallible. [Little used.] NWAD ERRABLE.1

ERRABLENESS, n. Liableness to mistake or error. NWAD ERRABLENESS.1

We may infer from the errableness of our nature, the reasonableness of compassion to the seduced. NWAD ERRABLENESS.2

ERRAND, n. NWAD ERRAND.1

1. A verbal message; a mandate or order; something to be told or done; a communication to be made to some person at a distance. The servant was sent on an errand; he told his errand; he has done the errand. These are the most common modes of using this word. NWAD ERRAND.2

I have a secret errand to thee, O King. Judges 3:19. NWAD ERRAND.3

2. Any special business to be transacted by a messenger. NWAD ERRAND.4

ERRANT, a. [L. errans, from erro, to err.] NWAD ERRANT.1

1. Wandering; roving; rambling; applied particularly to knights, who, in the middle ages, wandered about to seek adventures and display their heroism and generosity, called knights errant. NWAD ERRANT.2

2. Deviating from a certain course. NWAD ERRANT.3

3. Itinerant. NWAD ERRANT.4

Errant, for arrant, a false orthography. [See Arrant.] NWAD ERRANT.5

ERRANTRY, n. A wandering; a roving or rambling about. NWAD ERRANTRY.1

1. The employment of a knight errant. NWAD ERRANTRY.2

ERRATIC, a. [L. erraticus, from erro, to wander.] Wandering; having no certain course; roving about without a fixed destination. NWAD ERRATIC.1

1. Moving; not fixed or stationary; applied to the planets, as distinguished from the fixed stars. NWAD ERRATIC.2

2. Irregular; mutable. NWAD ERRATIC.3

ERRATICALLY, adv. Without rule, order or established method; irregularly. NWAD ERRATICALLY.1

ERRATION, n. A wandering. [Not used.] NWAD ERRATION.1

ERRATUM, n. plu. errata. [See Err.] An error or mistake in writing or printing. A list of the errata of a book is usually printed at the beginning or end, with references to the pages and lines in which they occur. NWAD ERRATUM.1

ERRHINE, a. er’rine. [Gr. the nose.] Affecting the nose, or to be snuffed into the nose; occasioning discharges from the nose. NWAD ERRHINE.1

ERRHINE, n. er’rine. A medicine to be snuffed up the nose, to promote discharges of mucus. NWAD ERRHINE.2

ERRING, ppr. Wandering from the truth or the right way; mistaking; irregular. NWAD ERRING.1

ERRONEOUS, a. [L. erroneus, from erro, to err.] NWAD ERRONEOUS.1

1. Wandering; roving; unsettled. NWAD ERRONEOUS.2

They roam NWAD ERRONEOUS.3

Erroneous and disconsolate. NWAD ERRONEOUS.4

2. Deviating; devious; irregular; wandering from the right course. NWAD ERRONEOUS.5

Erroneous circulation of blood. NWAD ERRONEOUS.6

[The foregoing applications of the word are less common.] NWAD ERRONEOUS.7

3. Mistaking; misled; deviating, by mistake, from the truth. Destroy not the erroneous with the malicious. NWAD ERRONEOUS.8

4. Wrong; false; mistaken; not conformable to truth; erring from truth or justice; as an erroneous opinion or judgment. NWAD ERRONEOUS.9

ERRONEOUSLY, adv. By mistake; not rightly; falsely. NWAD ERRONEOUSLY.1

ERRONEOUSNESS, n. The state of being erroneous, wrong or false; deviation from right; inconformity to truth; as the erroneousness of a judgement or proposition. NWAD ERRONEOUSNESS.1

ERROR, n. [L. error, from erro, to wander.] A wandering or deviation from the truth; a mistake in judgment, by which men assent to or believe what is not true. Error may be voluntary, or involuntary. Voluntary, when men neglect or pervert the proper means to inform the mind; involuntary, when the means of judging correctly are not in their power. An error committed through carelessness or haste is a blunder. NWAD ERROR.1

Charge home upon error its most tremendous consequences. NWAD ERROR.2

1. A mistake made in writing or other performance. It is no easy task to correct the errors of the press. Authors sometimes charge their own errors to the printer. NWAD ERROR.3

2. A wandering; excursion; irregular course. NWAD ERROR.4

Driv’n by the winds and errors of the sea. NWAD ERROR.5

[This sense is unusual and hardly legitimate.] NWAD ERROR.6

3. Deviation from law, justice or right; oversight; mistake in conduct. NWAD ERROR.7

Say not, it was an error. Ecclesiastes 5:6. NWAD ERROR.8

4. In scripture and theology, sin; iniquity; transgression. NWAD ERROR.9

Who can understand his errors? Cleanse thou me from secret faults. Psalm 19:12. NWAD ERROR.10

5. In law, a mistake in pleading or in judgment. A writ of error, is a writ founded on an alleged error in judgment, which carries the suit to another tribunal for redress. Hence the following verb, NWAD ERROR.11

ERROR, v.t. To determine a judgment of court to be erroneous. NWAD ERROR.12

[The use of this verb is not well authorized.] NWAD ERROR.13

ERSE, n. The language of the descendants of the Gaels or Celts, in the highlands of Scotland. NWAD ERSE.1

ERST, adv. [See Ere.] NWAD ERST.1

1. First; at first; at the beginning. NWAD ERST.2

2. Once; formerly; long ago. NWAD ERST.3

3. Before; till then or now; hitherto. NWAD ERST.4

[This word is obsolete, except in poetry.] NWAD ERST.5

ERSTWHILE, adv. Till then or now; formerly. NWAD ERSTWHILE.1

ERUBESCENCE, n. [L. erubescens, erubesco, from rubeo, to be red.] NWAD ERUBESCENCE.1

A becoming red; redness of the skin or surface of any thing; a blushing. NWAD ERUBESCENCE.2

ERUBESCENT, a. Red, or reddish; blushing. NWAD ERUBESCENT.1

ERUCT, ERUCTATE, v.t. [L. eructo, ructor, coinciding in elements with Heb. to spit.] NWAD ERUCT.1

To belch; to eject from the stomach, as wind. [Little used.] NWAD ERUCT.2

ERUCTATION, n. [L. eructatio.] The act of belching wind from the stomach; a belch. NWAD ERUCTATION.1

1. A violent bursting forth or ejection of wind or other matter from the earth. NWAD ERUCTATION.2

ERUDITE, a. [L. eruditus, from erudio, to instruct.] NWAD ERUDITE.1

Instructed; taught; learned. NWAD ERUDITE.2

ERUDITION, n. Learning; knowledge gained by study, or from books and instruction; particularly, learning in literature, as distinct from the sciences, as in history, antiquity and languages. The Scaligers were men of deep erudition. NWAD ERUDITION.1

The most useful erudition for republicans is that which exposes the causes of discords. NWAD ERUDITION.2

ERUGINOUS, a. [L. aeruginosus, from aerugo, rust.] NWAD ERUGINOUS.1

Partaking of the substance or nature of copper or the rust of copper; resembling rust. NWAD ERUGINOUS.2

ERUPT, v.i. To burst forth. [Not used.] NWAD ERUPT.1

ERUPTION, n. [L. eruptio, from erumpo, erupi; e and rumpo, for rupo.] NWAD ERUPTION.1

1. The act of breaking or bursting forth from inclosure or confinement; a violent emission of any thing, particularly of flames and lava from a volcano. The eruptions of Hecla in 1783, were extraordinary for the quantity of lava discharged. NWAD ERUPTION.2

2. A sudden or violent rushing forth of men or troops for invasion; sudden excursion. NWAD ERUPTION.3

Incensed at such eruption bold. NWAD ERUPTION.4

3. A burst of voice; violent exclamation. [Little used.] NWAD ERUPTION.5

4. In medical science, a breaking out of humors; a copious excretion of humors on the skin, in pustules; also, an efflorescence or redness on the skin, as in scarlatina; exanthemata; petechiae; vibices; as in small pox, measles and fevers. NWAD ERUPTION.6

ERUPTIVE, a. Bursting forth. NWAD ERUPTIVE.1

The sudden glance NWAD ERUPTIVE.2

Appears far south eruptive through the cloud. NWAD ERUPTIVE.3

1. Attended with eruptions or efflorescence, or producing it; as an eruptive fever. NWAD ERUPTIVE.4

ERYNGO, n. [Gr.] The sea-holly, Eryngium, a genus of plants of several species. The flowers are collected in a round head; the receptacle is paleaceous or chaffy. The young shoots are esculent. NWAD ERYNGO.1

ERYSIPELAS, n. [Gr.] A disease called St. Anthony’s fire; a diffused inflammation with fever of two or three days, generally with coma or delirium; an eruption of a fiery acrid humor, on some part of the body, but chiefly on the face. One species of erysipelas is called shingles, or eruption with small vesicles. NWAD ERYSIPELAS.1

ERYSIPELATOUS, a. Eruptive; resembling erysipelas, or partaking of its nature. NWAD ERYSIPELATOUS.1

ESCALADE, n. [L. scala, a ladder. See Scale.] In the military art, a furious attack made by troops on a fortified place, in which ladders are used to pass a ditch or mount a rampart. NWAD ESCALADE.1

Sin enters, not by escalade, but by cunning or treachery. NWAD ESCALADE.2

ESCALADE, v.t. To scale; to mount and pass or enter by means of ladders; as, to escalade a wall. NWAD ESCALADE.3

ESCALOP, n. skal’lup. A family of bivalvular shell-fish, whose shell is regularly indented. In the center of the top of the shell is a trigonal sinus with an elastic cartilage for its hinge. NWAD ESCALOP.1

1. A regular curving indenture in the margin of any thing. [See Scallop and Scollop.] NWAD ESCALOP.2

ESCAPADE, n. The fling of a horse. In Spanish, flight, escape. NWAD ESCAPADE.1

ESCAPE, v.t. [L. capio, with a negative prefix, or from a word of the same family.] NWAD ESCAPE.1

1. To flee from and avoid; to get out of the way; to shun; to obtain security from; to pass without harm; as, to escape danger. NWAD ESCAPE.2

A small number, that escape the sword, shall return. Jeremiah 44:28. NWAD ESCAPE.3

Having escaped the corruption that is in the world through lust. 2 Peter 1:4. NWAD ESCAPE.4

2. To pass unobserved; to evade; as, the fact escaped my notice or observation. NWAD ESCAPE.5

3. To avoid the danger of; as, to escape the sea. Acts 28:4. NWAD ESCAPE.6

Note. This verb is properly intransitive, and in strictness should be followed by from; but usage sanctions the omission of it. NWAD ESCAPE.7

ESCAPE, v.i. To flee, shun and be secure from danger; to avoid an evil. NWAD ESCAPE.8

Escape for thy life to the mountains. Genesis 19:17. NWAD ESCAPE.9

1. To be passed without harm. The balls whistled by me, my comrades fell, but I escaped. NWAD ESCAPE.10

ESCAPE, n. Flight to shun danger or injury; the act of fleeing from danger. NWAD ESCAPE.11

I would hasten my escape from the windy storm. Psalm 55:8. NWAD ESCAPE.12

1. A being passed without receiving injury, as when danger comes near a person, but passes by, and the person is passive. Every soldier who survives a battle has had such an escape. NWAD ESCAPE.13

2. Excuse; subterfuge; evasion. NWAD ESCAPE.14

3. In law, an evasion of legal restraint or the custody of the sheriff, without due course of law. Escapes are voluntary or involuntary; voluntary, when an officer permits an offender or debtor to quit his custody, without warrant; and involuntary, or negligent, when an arrested person quits the custody of the officer against his will, and is not pursued forthwith and retaken before the pursuer hath lost sight of him. NWAD ESCAPE.15

4. Sally; flight; irregularity. [Little used.] NWAD ESCAPE.16

5. Oversight; mistake. [Little used, or improper.] NWAD ESCAPE.17

ESCAPEMENT, n. That part of a clock or watch, which regulates its movements, and prevents their acceleration. NWAD ESCAPEMENT.1

ESCAPING, ppr. Fleeing from and avoiding danger or evil; being passed unobserved or unhurt; shunning; evading; securing safety; quitting the custody of the law, without warrant. NWAD ESCAPING.1

ESCAPING, n. Avoidance of danger. Ezra 9:14. NWAD ESCAPING.2

ESCARGATOIRE, n. A nursery of snails. NWAD ESCARGATOIRE.1

ESCARP, v.t. To slope; to form a slope; a military term. NWAD ESCARP.1

ESCARPMENT, n. A slope; a steep descent or declivity. NWAD ESCARPMENT.1

ESCHALOT, n. shallo’te. A species of small onion or garlic, belonging to the genus Allium; the ascalonicum. NWAD ESCHALOT.1

ESCHAR, n. [Gr.] In surgery, the crust or scab occasioned by burns or caustic applications. NWAD ESCHAR.1

1. A species of Coralline, resembling a net or woven cloth. NWAD ESCHAR.2

ESCHAROTIC, a. Caustic; having the power of searing or destroying the flesh. NWAD ESCHAROTIC.1

ESCHAROTIC, n. A caustic application; a medicine which sears or destroys flesh. NWAD ESCHAROTIC.2

ESCHEAT, n. [L. cado, cadere.] NWAD ESCHEAT.1

1. Any land or tenements which casually fall or revert to the lord within his manor, through failure of heirs. It is the determination of the tenure or dissolution of the mutual bond between the lord and tenant, from the extinction of the blood of the tenant, by death or natural means, or by civil means, as forfeiture or corruption of blood. NWAD ESCHEAT.2

2. In the U. States, the falling or passing of lands and tenements to the state, through failure of heirs or forfeiture, or in cases where no owner is found. NWAD ESCHEAT.3

3. The place or circuit within which the king or lord is entitled to escheats. NWAD ESCHEAT.4

4. A writ to recover escheats from the person in possession. NWAD ESCHEAT.5

5. The lands which fall to the lord or state by escheat. NWAD ESCHEAT.6

6. In Scots law, the forfeiture incurred by a man’s being denounced a rebel. NWAD ESCHEAT.7

ESCHEAT, v.i. In England, to revert, as land, to the lord of a manor, by means of the extinction of the blood of the tenant. NWAD ESCHEAT.8

1. In America, to fall or come, as land, to the state, through failure of heirs or owners, or by forfeiture for treason. In the feudal sense, no escheat can exist in the United States; but the word is used in statutes confiscating the estates of those who abandoned their country, during the revolution, and in statutes giving to the state the lands for which no owner can be found. NWAD ESCHEAT.9

ESCHEAT, v.t. To forfeit. [Not used.] NWAD ESCHEAT.10

ESCHEATABLE, a. Liable to escheat. NWAD ESCHEATABLE.1

ESCHEATAGE, n. The right of succeeding to an escheat. NWAD ESCHEATAGE.1

ESCHEATED, pp. Having fallen to the lord through want of heirs, or to the state for want of an owner, or by forfeiture. NWAD ESCHEATED.1

ESCHEATING, ppr. Reverting to the lord through failure of heirs, or to the state for want of an owner, or by forfeiture. NWAD ESCHEATING.1

ESCHEATOR, n. An officer who observes the escheats of the king in the county whereof he is escheator, and certifies them into the treasury. NWAD ESCHEATOR.1

ESCHEW, v.t. To flee from; to shun; to avoid. NWAD ESCHEW.1

He who obeys, destruction shall eschew. NWAD ESCHEW.2

Job--feared God and eschewed evil. Job 1:1. NWAD ESCHEW.3

ESCHEWED, pp. Shunned; avoided. NWAD ESCHEWED.1

ESCHEWING, ppr. Shunning; avoiding. [This word is nearly obsolete, or at least little used.] NWAD ESCHEWING.1

ESCOCHEON, n. The shield of the family. NWAD ESCOCHEON.1

ESCORT, n. A guard; a body of armed men which attends an officer, or baggage; provisions or munitions conveyed by land from place to place, to protect them from an enemy, or in general, for security. [This word is rarely, and never properly used for naval protection or protectors; the latter we call a convoy. I have found it applied to naval protection, but it is unusual.] NWAD ESCORT.1

ESCORT, v.t. To attend and guard on a journey by land; to attend and guard any thing conveyed by land. General Washington arrived at Boston, escorted by a detachment of dragoons. The guards escorted Lord Wellington to London. NWAD ESCORT.2

ESCORTED, pp. Attended and guarded by land. NWAD ESCORTED.1

ESCORTING, ppr. Attending and guarding by land. NWAD ESCORTING.1

ESCOT. [See Scot.] NWAD ESCOT.1

ESCOUADE. [See Squad.] NWAD ESCOUADE.1

ESCOUT. [See Scout.] NWAD ESCOUT.1

ESCRITOIR, n. [L. scribo; Eng. to scrape.] A box with instruments and conveniences for writing; sometimes, a desk or chest of drawers with an apartment for the instruments of writing. It is often pronounced scrutoir. NWAD ESCRITOIR.1

ESCROW, n. In law, a deed of lands or tenements delivered to a third person, to hold till some condition is performed by the grantee, and which is not to take effect till the condition is performed. It is then to be delivered to the grantee. NWAD ESCROW.1

ESCUAGE, n. [L. scutum, a shield.] In feudal law, service of the shield, called also scutage; a species of tenure by knight service, by which a tenant was bound to follow his lord to war; afterwards exchanged for a pecuniary satisfaction. NWAD ESCUAGE.1

ESCULAPIAN, a. [from Aesculapius, the physician.] NWAD ESCULAPIAN.1

Medical; pertaining to the healing art. NWAD ESCULAPIAN.2

ESCULENT, a. [L. esculentus, from esca, food.] Eatable; that is or may be used by man for food; as esculent plants; esculent fish. NWAD ESCULENT.1

ESCULENT, n. Something that is eatable; that which is or may be safely eaten by man. NWAD ESCULENT.2

ESCURIAL, n. The palace or residence of the King of Spain, about 15 miles North West of Madrid. This is the largest and most superb structure in the kingdom, and one of the most splendid in Europe. It is built in a dry barren spot, and the name itself is said to signify a place full of rocks. NWAD ESCURIAL.1

The Escurial is a famous monastery built by Philip II in the shape of a gridiron, in honor of St. Laurence. It takes its name from a village near Madrid. It contains the king’s palace, St. Laurence’s church, the monastery of Jerenomites, and the free schools. NWAD ESCURIAL.2

ESCUTCHEON, n. [L. scutum, a shield.] The shield on which a coat of arms is represented; the shield of a family; the picture of ensigns armorial. NWAD ESCUTCHEON.1

ESCUTCHEONED, a. Having a coat of arms or ensign. NWAD ESCUTCHEONED.1

ESLOIN, v.t. To remove. [Not in use.] NWAD ESLOIN.1

ESOPHAGOTOMY, n. [esophagus and a cutting.] In surgery, the operation of making an incision into the esophagus, for the purpose of removing any foreign substance that obstructs the passage. NWAD ESOPHAGOTOMY.1

ESOPHAGUS, n. [Gr.] The gullet; the canal through which food and drink pass to the stomach. NWAD ESOPHAGUS.1

ESOPIAN, a. [from Aesop.] Pertaining to AEsop; composed by him or in his manner. NWAD ESOPIAN.1

ESOTERIC, a. [Gr. interior, from within.] Private; an epithet applied to the private instructions and doctrines of Pythagoras; opposed to exoteric, or public. NWAD ESOTERIC.1

ESOTERY, n. Mystery; secrecy. [Little used.] NWAD ESOTERY.1

ESPALIER, n. [L. palus, a stake or pole.] A row of trees planted about a garden or in hedges, so as to inclose quarters or separate parts, and trained up to a lattice of wood-work, or fastened to stakes, forming a close hedge or shelter to protect plants against injuries from wind or weather. NWAD ESPALIER.1

ESPALIER, v.t. To form an espalier, or to protect by an espalier. NWAD ESPALIER.2

ESPARCET, n. A kind of sainfoin. NWAD ESPARCET.1

ESPECIAL, a. [L. specialis, from specio, to see, species, kind.] NWAD ESPECIAL.1

Principal; chief; particular; as, in an especial manner or degree. NWAD ESPECIAL.2

ESPECIALLY, adv. Principally; chiefly; particularly; in an uncommon degree; in reference to one person or thing in particular. NWAD ESPECIALLY.1

ESPECIALNESS, n. The state of being especial. NWAD ESPECIALNESS.1

ESPERANCE, n. [L. spero, to hope.] Hope. [Not English.] NWAD ESPERANCE.1

ESPIAL, n. [See Spy.] A spy; the act of espying. NWAD ESPIAL.1

ESPINEL, n. A kind or ruby. [See Spinel.] NWAD ESPINEL.1

ESPIONAGE, n. The practice or employment of spies; the practice of watching the words and conduct of others and attempting to make discoveries, as spies or secret emissaries; the practice of watching others without being suspected, and giving intelligence of discoveries made. NWAD ESPIONAGE.1

ESPLANADE, n. [L. planus, plain.] NWAD ESPLANADE.1

1. In fortification, the glacis of the counter scarp, or the sloping of the parapet of the covered-way towards the country; or the void space between the glacis of a citadel, and the first houses of the town. NWAD ESPLANADE.2

2. In gardening, a grass-plat. NWAD ESPLANADE.3

ESPOUSAL, a. espouz’al. [See Espouse.] Used in or relating to the act of espousing or betrothing. NWAD ESPOUSAL.1

ESPOUSAL, n. The act of espousing or betrothing. NWAD ESPOUSAL.2

1. Adoption; protection. NWAD ESPOUSAL.3

ESPOUSALS, n. plu. The act of contracting or affiancing a man and woman to each other; a contract or mutual promise of marriage. NWAD ESPOUSALS.1

I remember thee, the kindness of thy youth, the love of thine espousals. NWAD ESPOUSALS.2